The decolorizing agent in the acid fast stain is acid alcohol. The decolorizing agent in the gram stain is ethanol.
Alcohol is a term used for any O-H group that is attached to a carbon. Perhapes the alcohol is found in a Safranin stain. I hope I have this right but if alcohol was used as the decolorizing agent, it may wash out too much stain to get a good view in an oil emersion microscope.
In order to dissolve chalk in water, vinegar needs to be added. The vinegar has acid in it that eats away at the chalk to dissolve it.
When a strong acid and a strong base mix, all acidic protons will react with every basic molecule until one or the other runs out. The curve for a titration of a strong acid with a strong base will change slowly at first, and dramatically when the equivalence point (where the number of moles of acid is equal to the number of moles of base) is reached. The reaction, like all acid-base reactions, is fast.
not very fast
Concerto is the baroque form following the pattern fast-slow-fast.
Alcohol is a term used for any O-H group that is attached to a carbon. Perhapes the alcohol is found in a Safranin stain. I hope I have this right but if alcohol was used as the decolorizing agent, it may wash out too much stain to get a good view in an oil emersion microscope.
Yes, acid-fast stain is a type of differential stain.
in Zn we use 3% decolorizer, while in modified 1% h2so4 is used, modified is used for paracite like Cryptosporidium, cyclosporidium and bacterias like nocaddia and actinomyces. also in modified heating isn't done.
The acid-fast stain is positive in the sample.
Yes, Maneval's stain is an acid-fast stain used in microbiology to detect acid-fast bacteria such as Mycobacterium species. It involves using acid-alcohol to decolorize non-acid-fast bacteria while acid-fast bacteria retain the stain due to their waxy cell wall.
The counter or secondary stain used in the acid-fast stain technique is methylene blue.
No, acid-fast bacteria do not stain gram-negative when subjected to the gram stain.
The cold acid-fast stain used for Mycobacterium tuberculosis is called the Kinyoun stain or the Kinyoun cold stain. This staining technique is commonly used to identify acid-fast bacteria that are not easily stained by traditional methods.
The acid-fast stain result is positive for the sample.
Yes, a mordant is used in the acid-fast stain technique. The mordant used is heat to help drive the primary stain, usually carbol-fuchsin, into acid-fast bacteria, such as Mycobacterium species, which resist decolorization with acid-alcohol.
Yes, endospores are acid-fast because their thick walls are resistant to most stains and dyes, including the acid-fast stain used in microbiology to detect mycobacteria like Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This resistance allows endospores to retain the stain even after decolorization with acid-alcohol.
The color common to both the gram stain and the acid-fast stain is red/pink. In the gram stain, Gram-negative bacteria appear red or pink after staining with safranin, while in the acid-fast stain, acid-fast bacteria such as Mycobacterium species retain the red/pink color of carbol fuchsin despite decolorization with acid-alcohol.