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Mouse Tissue Fixation

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2014
One of the primary goals of fixation is to stop postmortem changes that degrade the tissue and allow optimal preservation of morphologic and cytological detail as well as nucleic acid integrity. Following death, tissues soon undergo autolysis, and if organisms from the gastrointestinal, urinary, or respiratory tracts are present, their colonization can
Robert D, Cardiff   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Soft tissue fixation to bone

The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 1986
This experiment was designed to compare the imme diate fixation strengths of various methods of soft tissue fixation techniques. The fixation techniques tested were the barbed staple, stone staple, suture techniques, screw with spiked plastic washer, and the screw with spiked soft tissue plate.
D B, Robertson, D M, Daniel, E, Biden
openaire   +2 more sources

Lysozyme antigenicity and tissue fixation

Histochemistry, 1978
The preservation of lysozyme (LZM) antigenicity was studied in paraffin embedded tissue blocks. The reactivity for LZM varied with the type of tissue studied, the fixative used, the osmolarity and pH of the fixative, fixation time and temperature, and the method of dehydration. In both rat and human tissues aqueous fixatives were superior to nonaqueous
openaire   +2 more sources

Fixation of Mouse Embryos and Tissues

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2007
INTRODUCTIONThis protocol provides methods for fixation of mouse embryos and tissues with paraformaldehyde, Bouin’s fixative, or methanol/DMSO solution.
Andras, Nagy   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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