[Histonet] curious about soaking paraffin blocks.
Philip Oshel
oshel1pe <@t> cmich.edu
Mon Oct 29 07:42:54 CDT 2007
I've been reading the posts in this thread, and I doubt that the
proteins have anything to do with the differences in processing
schedules. I suspect it's more the fat content. Both the amount and
the nature of saturated vs unsaturated fats.
I suspect human tissue is generally fattier than other animals, so a
dehydration schedule that works for people extracts too much fat from
other animal tissues, making them "dry" and crumbly.
If this is true, the same sort of difference should show up when
sectioning tissues from, say, wild squirrels in the early spring
(after they've used up their winter-survival fat stores) and
squirrels in the late fall/early winter, when their fat stores should
be maximal.
Maybe. Any of the histotechs in Vet Med colleges noticed having to
change processing schedules of wild or outdoor animals with the
seasons?
As to winning ... yeah, I heard something about that. Nothing
important. Something about hitting sticks with balls, or the failure
to hit them.
Phil
>"Since we process every organ of rat, mouse, dog, rabbit and monkey on
>many animals, processing by hand would be archaic. The amount of time
>each species is processed depends on the tissue size. Mouse having the
>shortest processing schedule. Monkey is the easiest to section because
>it is so close to human tissue. All tissue is fully fixed in 10% NBF
>before processing."
>Bonnie
>
>That's an interesting comment "Monkey is the easiest to section because
>it is so close to human tissue", is that because primate tissue is
>easier to process or that processing schedules are primarily focused on
>human material? Is there something in primate proteins that makes it
>easier to process than say rodent tissue?
>
>It said on my wireless this morning that someone wearing red socks had
>won something in North America; what was that?
>
>
>Kemlo Rogerson
>Pathology Manager
>DD 01934 647057 or extension 3311
>Mob 07749 754194; Pager 07659 597107;
>
>Biology is the least of what makes someone a mother. --Oprah Winfrey
--
Philip Oshel
Microscopy Facility Supervisor
Biology Department
024C Brooks Hall
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
(989) 774-3576
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