Abstract
TO enable staining of insoluble calcium salts with glyoxal bis(2-hydroxyanil) (GBHA), the original solution containing 2 ml of 0.4% GBHA in absolute ethanol, and 0.3 ml of aqueous 5% NaOH, and limited to staining only soluble calcium salts, was modified as follows: 1, 2 ml of 0.4% GBHA in absolute ethanol in 0.6 ml of 10% aqueous NaOH; 11, 0.1 gm GBHA in 2 ml of 3.4% NaOH in 75% ethanol. To prevent diffusion and loss of calcium, the tissues were processed by the freeze-substitution or freeze-dry method and sections stained without removing the paraffin. Modification I is effective only when 1 or 2 drops placed on the section are evaporated gradually to dryness, concentrating the GBHA and NaOH on the insoluble calcium salts. Modification II is effective when dried or poured on the the section and allowed to stain for 5 min. The stained slides are immersed for 15 min in 90% ethanol saturated with KCN and Na2CO3 for specificity to calcium; rinsed and counterstained in 95% ethanol containing 0.1% each of fast green FCF and methylene blue; rinsed and dehydrated in ethanol; deparaffinized and cleared in xylene; and mounted in neutral synthetic resin. Although the modified methods tested on models failed to stain reagent grade CaCO3 and Ca3(PO4)2 crystals completely, apatite in developing vertebrae and calcified plaques in soft tissues were stained intensely red. The distribution of gross deposits of insoluble calcium salt in tissue sections corresponded with that shown in adjacent sections by the alizarin red S, ferrocyanide, and von Kossa methods. The modified GBHA method revealed smaller quantities of insoluble as well as soluble calcium salts discretely within cells where the other methods failed; also, calcium in cytoplasm of hypertrophied cartilage cells of developing vertebrae, and in cytoplasm of renal tubular cells of magnesium-deficient rats, not described previously, was demonstrated.
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