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  2. Frozen section procedure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frozen_section_procedure

    The frozen section procedure as practiced today in medical laboratories is based on the description by Dr Louis B. Wilson in 1905. Wilson developed the technique from earlier reports at the request of Dr William Mayo, surgeon and one of the founders of the Mayo Clinic [3] Earlier reports by Dr Thomas S. Cullen at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore also involved frozen section, but only after ...

  3. Cryofixation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryofixation

    The ultimate objective is to freeze the specimen so rapidly (at 10 4 to 10 6 K per second) that ice crystals are unable to form, or are prevented from growing big enough to cause damage to the specimen's ultrastructure. The formation of samples containing specimens in amorphous ice is the "holy grail" of biological cryomicroscopy. [citation needed]

  4. Microtome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microtome

    Frozen section procedure: water-rich tissues are hardened by freezing and cut in the frozen state with a freezing microtome or microtome-cryostat; sections are stained and examined with a light microscope. This technique is much faster than traditional histology (5 minutes vs 16 hours) and is used in conjunction with medical procedures to ...

  5. Cryosurgery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryosurgery

    A ball of ice crystals forms around the probe which results in freezing of nearby cells. When it is required to deliver gas to various parts of the tumor, more than one probe is used. After cryosurgery, the frozen tissue is either naturally absorbed by the body in the case of internal tumors, or it dissolves and forms a scab for external tumors ...

  6. Microtechnique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microtechnique

    During the freezing procedure, the water in tissues is easy to form ice crystals, which often affects the antigen localization. [37] It is generally believed that when ice crystals are small, the effect is small, and when ice crystals are large, the damage to the tissue structure is large, and the above phenomenon is more likely to occur in ...

  7. Laura Kenny: Can elite sport damage women's fertility? - AOL

    www.aol.com/laura-kenny-elite-sport-damage...

    She said research was "playing catch up" with the amount of attention on male sport. "We're seeing the repercussions of that with growing professionalisation of women's sports and more female ...

  8. Histology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histology

    Similar to the frozen section procedure employed in medicine, cryosectioning is a method to rapidly freeze, cut, and mount sections of tissue for histology. The tissue is usually sectioned on a cryostat or freezing microtome. [12] The frozen sections are mounted on a glass slide and may be stained to enhance the contrast between different tissues.

  9. My Top 10 Stocks to Buy in 2024 Are Beating the Market by 48% ...

    www.aol.com/top-10-stocks-buy-2024-211100857.html

    If you'd instead put your $10,000 into an S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) index fund, you would've had just $11,900 at the end of the year. An equal investment in an S&P 500 index fund would be worth ...