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Biondi-Heidenhain stain <technique> An obsolete stain for spirochetes, using acid fuchsin and orange G.
(05 Mar 2000)
Birch-Hirschfeld stain <technique> An obsolete stain for demonstrating amyloid, using Bismarck brown and crystal violet; amyloid is usually stained a bright ruby red, whereas the cytoplasm of cells is not stained and nuclei are brown.
(05 Mar 2000)
Borrel's blue stain <technique> A stain for demonstrating spirochetes, treponemes, and Borrelia organisms, using silver oxide (prepared by means of mixing solutions of silver nitrate and sodium bicarbonate) and methylene blue.
(05 Mar 2000)
Bowie's stain <technique> A stain for juxtaglomerular granules in which the kidney sections are stained in a mixture of Biebrich scarlet red and ethyl violet; juxtaglomerular granules and elastic fibres are stained a deep purple, erythrocytes are amber, and background tissue appears in shades of red.
(05 Mar 2000)
Brown-Brenn stain <technique> A method for differential staining of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria in tissue sections; it utilises a modified Gram stain of crystal violet, Gram's iodine, and basic fuchsin.
(05 Mar 2000)
Cajal's astrocyte stain <technique> A method for demonstrating astrocytes by impregnation in a solution containing gold chloride and mercuric chloride.
(05 Mar 2000)
carbol-thionin stain <technique> A stain useful for demonstrating typhoid bacilli in films and sections, and for Nissl substance.
(05 Mar 2000)
Macchiavello's stain <technique> A basic fuchsin-citric acid-methylene blue sequence in smears which produces red staining of rickettsiae and inclusion bodies, with nuclei staining blue.
(05 Mar 2000)
MacNeal's tetrachrome blood stain <technique> A stain for blood smears comprised of a mixture of methylene blue, azure A, methylene violet, and eosin Y.
(05 Mar 2000)
Padykula-Herman stain <technique> For myosin ATPase, a technique similar to that of Gomori's non-specific alkaline phosphatase stain, except that incubation is carried out with ATP as the substrate at pH 9.4 in the absence of Mg++; enzyme activity is demonstrated as blackened deposits in the A band of striated muscle sarcomeres; control tissue sections lacking substrate and containing sulfhydryl inhibitors are necessary.
(05 Mar 2000)
Paget-Eccleston stain <technique> An aldehyde-thionin-PAS-orange G staining technique modified to identify seven different cell types in the anterior pituitary gland.
(05 Mar 2000)
van Ermengen's stain <technique> A method for staining flagella which utilises glacial acetic acid, osmic acid, tannic acid, silver nitrate, gallic acid, and potassium acetate.
(05 Mar 2000)
van Gieson's stain <technique> A mixture of acid fuchsin in saturated picric acid solution, used in collagen staining.
(05 Mar 2000)
Rambourg's chromic acid-phosphotungstic acid stain <technique> A stain for glycoproteins, used with an electron microscope, with which ultrathin tissue sections reveal complex carbohydrates in the same locations as shown by Rambourg's periodic acid-chromic methenamine-silver stain.
(05 Mar 2000)
Rambourg's periodic acid-chromic methenamine-silver stain <technique> A stain for glycoproteins, used with an electron microscope, adapted from the Gomori-Jones periodic acid-methenamine-silver stain; it produces silver deposits in mature saccules of the Golgi apparatus, lysosomal vesicles, cell coat, and basement membranes.
(05 Mar 2000)
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