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  2. Staining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staining

    Once stained, they do not decolourize. The addition of heat during the staining process is a huge contributing factor. [15] Heat helps open the spore's membrane so the dye can enter. The main purpose of this stain is to show germination of bacterial spores.

  3. Gram stain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gram_stain

    Applying a primary stain (crystal violet) to a heat-fixed smear of a bacterial culture. Heat fixation kills some bacteria but is mostly used to affix the bacteria to the slide so that they do not rinse out during the staining procedure. The addition of iodine, which binds to crystal violet and traps it in the cell

  4. Leishman stain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leishman_stain

    The methanolic stock solution is stable and also serves the purpose of directly fixing the smear eliminating a prefixing step. If a working solution is made by dilution with an aqueous buffer, the resulting mixture is very unstable and cannot be used for long. Leishman stain is named after its inventor, the Scottish pathologist William Boog ...

  5. Diff-Quik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diff-Quik

    Major applications include blood smears, bone marrow aspirates, semen analysis and cytology of various body fluids including urine and cerebrospinal fluid. [7] [8] Microbiologic agents, such as bacteria and fungi, also appear more easily in Diff-Quik. [3] This is useful for the detection of for example Helicobacter pylori from gastric and ...

  6. Fixation (histology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixation_(histology)

    This diluted bacteria sample is commonly referred to as a smear after it is placed on a slide. After a smear has dried at room temperature, the slide is gripped by tongs or a clothespin and passed through the flame of a Bunsen burner several times to heat-kill and adhere the organism to the slide.

  7. Blood smear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_smear

    Thick smears allow the microscopist to screen a larger volume of blood and are about eleven times more sensitive than the thin film, so picking up low levels of infection is easier on the thick film, but the appearance of the parasite is much more distorted and therefore distinguishing between the different species can be much more difficult.

  8. Cytopathology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytopathology

    For example, a common application of cytopathology is the Pap smear, a screening tool used to detect precancerous cervical lesions that may lead to cervical cancer. Cytopathologic tests are sometimes called smear tests because the samples may be smeared across a glass microscope slide [ 4 ] for subsequent staining and microscopic examination.

  9. Inoculation loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inoculation_loop

    An inoculation loop (also called a smear loop, inoculation wand or microstreaker) is a simple tool used mainly by microbiologists to pick up and transfer a small sample of microorganisms called inoculum from a microbial culture, e.g. for streaking on a culture plate. [1] [2] This process is called inoculation.