Histology
Histosol
$45.50 – $200.00
Hazardous Shipping Fees: This product may incur an additional hazardous shipping fee. We will pack the products to minimize all shipping costs, and the final charge will reflect the shipping cost and any applicable hazardous fees charged by FedEx.
Catalog number: HS-100
- Ideal for Western Blotting Applications
- Cast a 12% Gel in One Fourth the Time
- Eliminates Mixing and Measuring
- Precast Convenience without the Precast Price
Description
Hazardous Shipping Fees: This product may incur an additional hazardous shipping fee. We will pack the products to minimize all shipping costs, and the final charge will reflect the shipping cost and any applicable hazardous fees charged by FedEx.
Catalog number: HS-100
- High flashpoint
- Xylene substitute
Catalog number: HS-100
Histosol is the original high flash point (114°F TCC) histological clearing agent. It is intended to be used as a replacement for xylene where the hazards associated with aromatic hydrocarbon vapors are to be reduced. Museum-quality tissue slides can be prepared with Histosol without a change in protocol or procedure. Histosol is manufactured from petrochemical products and is miscible in all proportions with ethanol, isopropanol, and t-butanol. It is also miscible with all paraffin-based tissue embedding media and all permanent mounting materials.
Additional information
Weight | N/A |
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Safety Overview
Safety Summary (see SDS for complete information before using product):
EMERGENCY OVERVIEW – IMMEDIATE HAZARD
POISON! DANGER! MAY BE FATAL IF SWALLOWED. HARMFUL IF INHALED. CONTACT WITH OTHER MATERIALS MAY CAUSE FIRE.
Flammable. Harmful if swallowed. Keep out of reach of children. Do not breathe fumes. Avoid contact with the skin. If swallowed, do not induce vomiting. Seek medical advice immediately and show this container or label.
- Working Safely with Fixatives
- Tissue Processing for Electron Microscopy
- The Chemistry of Dyes and Staining
- Suggested procedures for processing fixed tissue
- Staining Tissue Sections for Electron Microscopy
- Staining Procedures
- Sectioning Tissue for Electron Microscopy
- Sectioning
- Overview of the Paraffin Technique
- Overview of Fixation
- Non-Aldehyde Fixatives
- Mounting Tissue Sections
- Immunohistochemistry
- Fixing Tissue for Electron Microscopy
- Factors Affecting Fixation
- Embedding
- Electron Microscopy
- Detection Systems in Immunohistochemistry
- Dehydration
- Decalcifying Tissue for Histological Processing
- Clearing Tissue Sections
- Artifacts in Histologic Sections
- Antibody Binding
- Aldehyde Fixatives