[Histonet] cutting with glassknifes
Ross Langston
langston at hawaii.edu
Sun Apr 30 11:40:14 CDT 2023
Hello- I do not work in a conventional histology lab, but we
exclusively use resin (JB-4) Embedding and glass knives on MT-1s to do
histology on gonadal tissue for fisheries research. Although the MT-1 is
an ultramicrotome, we use it more like a conventional microtome. The reason
we do this rather than wax histology is that our "lab" travels to some
pretty remote areas (Papua New Guinea, Micronesia, etc) and you need less
stuff to do resin histology (really only a JB-4 Kit, microtome, and some
glass knives plus whichever staining method you prefer) and can even do it
without power.
We actually have a workshop coming up soon in Guam, if you are interested.
Ross
On Sun, Apr 30, 2023 at 6:19 AM Gudrun Lang via Histonet <
histonet at lists.utsouthwestern.edu> wrote:
> Dear histonetters!
>
> I have a question for the experienced histo-people.
>
> Is it still in practice to use glassknifes for cutting on rotary- or
> sliding-microtomes? For plastic-embedded tissue in light-microscopy?
>
> Or ar glassknifes only found in EM-technique?
>
>
>
> I am just curious, because I assume, it is a rather difficult skill to
> handle.
>
> I made a short internet-search, but got no hints on this issue.
>
>
>
> Thank you and kind regards
>
> Gudrun Lang
>
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