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Staining
Staining Blood Smears
Stain only one set of smears, and leave the duplicates unstained. The latter will
prove useful if a problem occurs during the staining and/or if you wish later to send the
smears to a reference laboratory.
Wright (Wright-Giemsa)
stain
Used in hematology, this stain is not optimal for blood parasites. It can be used if
rapid results are needed, but should be followed up when possible with a confirmatory
Giemsa stain, so that Schüffners dots can be demonstrated.
Giemsa stain -
Recommended for detection and identification of blood parasites.
1.
Stock 100× Giemsa Buffer |
0.67 M |
Na2HPO4 |
59.24
g |
NaH2PO4H2O |
36.38
g |
Deionized water |
1000.00
ml |
Autoclave or filter-sterilize (0.2 µm pore). Sterile buffer
is stable at room temperature for one year. |
2.
Working Giemsa Buffer |
0.0067M, pH 7.2 |
Stock Giemsa Buffer |
10.0 ml |
Deionized water |
990.0 ml |
Check pH before use. Should be 7.2. Stable at room temperature
for one month. |
3.
Triton X-100 5% |
|
Deionized water (warmed to 56°C) |
95.0 ml |
Triton X-100 |
5.0 ml |
Prewarm
the deionized water and slowly add the Triton X-100, swirling to mix. |
4. Stock
Giemsa stain (Giemsa stain is available commercially, but the following formulation
gives more constant results and does not expire)
Glass beads, 3.0 mm
|
30.0 ml
|
Absolute methanol, acetone-free
|
270.0 ml
|
Giemsa stain powder (certified)
|
3.0 g
|
Glycerol
|
140.0 ml
|
- Put into
a 500 ml brown bottle the glass beads and the other ingredients,
in the order listed. Screw cap tightly. Use glassware that
is clean and dry.
- Place
the bottles at an angle on a shaker; shake moderately for 30 to
60 minutes daily, for at least 14 days.
- Kept
tightly stoppered and free of moisture, stock Giemsa stain is stable
at room temperature indefinitely (stock stain improves with
age).
- Just
before use, shake the bottle. Filter a small amount of this stock
stain through Whatman #1 filter paper into a test tube. Pipet from
this tube to prepare the working Giemsa stain.
5. Working
Giemsa stain (2.5%): make fresh for each batch of smears
Working Giemsa buffer |
39 ml |
Giemsa Stain Stock |
1 ml |
5% Triton X-100 |
2 drops |
Staining
- Prepare fresh working Giemsa
stain in a staining jar, according to the directions above. (The 40 ml fills adequately
a standing Coplin jar; for other size jars, adapt volume but do not change
proportions).
- Pour 40 ml of working Giemsa
buffer into a second staining jar. Add 2 drops of Triton X-100.
Adapt volume to jar size.
- Place slides into the working
Giemsa stain (2.5%) for 45-60 minutes.
- Remove thin
smear slides and rinse by
dipping 3-4 times in the Giemsa buffer. Thick smears should be
left in buffer for 5 minutes.
- Dry the slides upright in a
rack.
Note: As alternates to
this 45-60 minutes in 2.5% Giemsa stain, the smears could be stained for shorter times in
more concentrated stains. One alternate is 10 minutes in 10% Giemsa; the shorter stains
yield faster results, but use more stain and might be of less predictable quality.
Staining Procedure:
Quality Control
To ensure that proper staining results have been achieved, a positive
smear (malaria) should be included with each new batch of working Giemsa
stain. Since good quality control smears are not available commercially,
they may be prepared from a patients blood and stored for future
use in the following manner:
- Choose a
patient blood specimen, anticoagulated with EDTA, that has enough parasites
so that at least one is found in every 2 to 3 fields.
- Make as many
thin smears as possible, preferably within one hour after the blood
was drawn from the patient.
- Allow the
smears to dry quickly, using a fan or blower at room temperature.
- Fix the smears
in absolute (100%) methanol; allow them to dry.
- Place them,
touching front to back, in a box without separating grooves.
- Label the
outside of the box with the species, date and Giemsa control slides.”
- Store at
-70°C (or colder) if the purpose is to make quality control slides.
- Just before
use, remove the smear from the box and allow the condensation to evaporate;
label the slide + malaria and the present date. The
smear is now ready for staining since it was previously fixed.
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