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Silver Staining of Bone Prior to Decalcification for Quantitative Determination of Osteoid in Sections

66

Citations

6

References

1972

Year

Abstract

Slices, 1–2 mm thick, of alcohol-fixed bone are immersed in 2% aqueous AgNO3 in the dark for 48 hr. After thorough washing in running tap water, the silver phosphate formed at the interface of osteoid and calcified bone is reduced to a black deposit by 5% aqueous sodium hypophosphite containing 0.1 N NaOH, 0.2 ml/100 ml. The blocks are then immersed in 5% aqueous Na2S2O3 and after further washing pass through a routine formic acid decalcification and paraffin wax embedding schedule. Sections cut at 5 μ thickness and counterstained with Van Gieson's picrofuchsin show a clear differentiation between osteoid tissue and the outer limit of calcification in trabecular or cortical bone, thus making them suitable for quantitative studies. The main advantage of the method is the production of intact stained sections without specialised embedding or cutting techniques.

References

YearCitations

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