It's used to differentiate the different constituent of the blood cell
giemsa
The difference between Wright Stain and Giemsa Stain is the intensity of the stain. The Giemsa Stain provides a better stain intensity than the Giemsa stain.
giemsa stains the phosphate group especially in the adenine-thymine rich region.
Acetic orcein is used to stain chromosomes in a plant cell so that you can view them easily through a microscope.
Leishman staining is used for staining blood in microscopy and its purpose is to both identify and differentiate trypanosomas, leucocytes and malaria parasites. Giesma staining is used to stain DNA region, specifically chromosomes in order to locate aberrations like rearrangement and translocations.
R, rubrum is Gram negative. Why? Because after the decolorizing agent Ethonal is added, it removes the purple from the the cell walls.. When the secondary or counterstain, safranin is added, the cell stains pink.
The difference between Wright Stain and Giemsa Stain is the intensity of the stain. The Giemsa Stain provides a better stain intensity than the Giemsa stain.
Giemsa stain binds the regions with high content of adenine-thymine complex.
giemsa stains the phosphate group especially in the adenine-thymine rich region.
because giemsa stain is a mixture of methyl acetate Eosin and azure b. it doesnot contain any fixative that is why we use methanol to fix smear during giemsa stain other stain like lieshman contain acetyl free methyl alcohol as a fixative so it does not need to fix slide stain with lieshman stain.
Giemsa is the most common stain used to see banding patterns in chromosomes
Gustav Giemsa was born in 1867.
Gustav Giemsa died in 1948.
Edmund Giemsa was born in 1912.
Edmund Giemsa died in 1994.
Fleas carry the bacterium Yersinia pestis, formerly known as Pasteurella pestis. The plague bacillus can be stained with Giemsa stain and typically looks like a safety pin under the microscope.
It depends on what tissue you're looking at, what you want to stain, how the tissue has been stored... Besides very specific staining, there are different types of staining. For example, immunohistochemistry, which uses antibodies to stick coloured stains to cell surface receptors. Or, chemical staining - the most common is H&E staining (haemotoxylin & eosin), so if you're just having fun in a lab and want to see general structures of cells, use this one.
to fixed the blood smear