Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Techniques in Microscopic Anatomy

Techniques in Microscopic Anatomy

Techniques in Microscopic Anatomy

On this page

Techniques in Microscopic Anatomy - Peeking at Cells

  • Core Concepts:
    • Magnification: Image enlargement.
    • Resolution: Distinguishing close points; limit $d = \frac{0.61\lambda}{NA}$.
  • Microscope Types:
    • Light Microscopy (LM): Bright-field, Phase contrast, Fluorescence, Confocal.
    • Electron Microscopy (EM):
      • TEM (Transmission): Internal ultrastructure (📌 TEM = Through EM).
      • SEM (Scanning): Surface details, 3D (📌 SEM = Surface EM).
  • Specimen Preparation: Fixation (e.g., 10% formalin), Dehydration, Clearing, Embedding (paraffin), Sectioning (microtome), Staining. Light vs Electron Microscope Diagram

⭐ Hematoxylin (basic dye) stains acidic structures (e.g., nucleus, RER) blue/purple (basophilic); Eosin (acidic dye) stains basic structures (e.g., cytoplasm, mitochondria, collagen) pink/red (acidophilic).

Techniques in Microscopic Anatomy - Slice & Dice Prep

This outlines the standard paraffin wax technique for preparing tissue samples for light microscopy.

  • Fixation: Prevents autolysis/putrefaction. 10% formalin cross-links proteins, preserves tissue structure.
  • Dehydration: Removes tissue water via graded alcohols (e.g., 70%90%100% ethanol).
  • Clearing: Xylene replaces alcohol, makes tissue translucent, miscible with paraffin wax.
  • Infiltration: Molten paraffin wax (56-60°C) permeates all tissue spaces.
  • Embedding: Tissue oriented in paraffin block, provides firm support for sectioning.
  • Sectioning: Microtome precisely cuts thin slices (3-10 µm) for microscopy.
    • Frozen sections: Rapid diagnosis (intraoperative via cryostat); less morphological detail.
  • Staining & Mounting: H&E stain (common) adds contrast. Coverslip protects specimen.

Microtome sectioning paraffin block

⭐ Formalin (formaldehyde solution) is the most common fixative; it preserves tissue architecture by cross-linking proteins, primarily lysine residues.

Techniques in Microscopic Anatomy - Staining Hues & Clues

  • Principle: Dyes selectively bind to specific tissue components based on their chemical nature.
    • Acidic dyes (e.g., Eosin): Anionic; stain basic (acidophilic/eosinophilic) structures like cytoplasm, collagen, muscle. Hue: Pink/Red.
    • Basic dyes (e.g., Hematoxylin): Cationic; stain acidic (basophilic) structures like nucleus (DNA/RNA), ribosomes, RER. Hue: Blue/Purple.
  • Common Stains & Key Uses:
    • Hematoxylin & Eosin (H&E): Routine; nuclei blue/purple, cytoplasm pink.
    • Periodic Acid-Schiff (PAS): Glycogen, mucus, basement membranes, fungi. Hue: Magenta.

      ⭐ PAS-positive, diastase-resistant globules in hepatocytes are a hallmark of Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency.

    • Masson's Trichrome: Differentiates collagen (blue/green) from muscle/keratin (red); nuclei (black).
    • Silver Stains (Reticulin, GMS): Reticular fibers, fungi, basement membranes. Hue: Black.
    • Oil Red O / Sudan Black B: Lipids (requires fresh/frozen tissue). Hue: Red / Black.
  • Metachromasia: Stain changes color upon binding (e.g., Toluidine blue stains mast cell granules purple, not blue).
  • Immunohistochemistry (IHC): Highly specific; uses antibody-antigen reactions to localize proteins.

Techniques in Microscopic Anatomy - Advanced EM & Probes

  • Advanced Electron Microscopy (EM):
    • Transmission EM (TEM): For internal ultrastructure (e.g., organelles). Resolution: ~0.05-0.1 nm.
      • Cryo-EM: High-resolution of biomolecules in native state.
      • Freeze-Fracture/Etching: Visualizes membrane interiors.
    • Scanning EM (SEM): For 3D surface morphology. Resolution: ~3-10 nm.
  • Molecular Probes & Advanced Light Microscopy:
    • Immunohistochemistry (IHC): Localizes specific proteins using enzyme/fluorescent-labeled antibodies.
    • In Situ Hybridization (ISH): Detects specific DNA/RNA sequences using labeled nucleic acid probes.
      • Fluorescence ISH (FISH) is common for genetic analysis.
    • Confocal Microscopy: Provides high-resolution, optically sectioned images from fluorescently labeled specimens; allows 3D reconstruction.
    • Autoradiography: Traces metabolic pathways using radioactive isotopes. Classical vs. Cryo Preparation for Microscopy

⭐ FISH is crucial for detecting chromosomal abnormalities like translocations (e.g., Philadelphia chromosome t(9;22) in CML), deletions, and aneuploidies.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Formalin (10%) is the most common fixative; glutaraldehyde for Electron Microscopy (EM).
  • H&E stain: Hematoxylin stains nuclei blue (basophilic); Eosin stains cytoplasm pink (acidophilic).
  • PAS stain detects glycogen, mucopolysaccharides, basement membranes (stains magenta).
  • Electron Microscopy (EM) provides ultra-high magnification: TEM for internal structures, SEM for surface details.
  • Immunohistochemistry (IHC) uses antigen-antibody binding to localize specific cellular components.
  • Frozen sections enable rapid intraoperative diagnosis; morphology is less detailed.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE