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WRIGHT'S
DIP STAT STAINING
INTRODUCTION
The traditional
wright's stain, an alcoholic solution of methylene blue and eosin Y, dates
from
the early 1890's. Since then there have been many modifications, most involving
partial oxidative demethylation of the methylene blue to improve polychroming.
Modern day samples of the dye usually contain mixtures of methylene blue,
azure
A, and thionin ( the mixture is often called "polychromed methylene blue")
compounded with eosin Y. Med Chem's Wright's Dip Stat has the azures and the
eosin Y in separate solutions which improves staining control and reproducibility
as well as speed. The total staining time is about thirty seconds.
REAGENTS
| PRODUCT
# |
DESCRIPTION |
PACKAGING
|
| 301 |
Tinted
Methanol |
8
oz, 16 oz, 1 gal |
| 302 |
Eosinate
Stain |
8
oz, 16 oz, 1 gal |
| 303 |
Polychromed
Methylene Blue |
8 oz, 16 oz, 1 gal |
| 9265B |
Deionized
Water |
1 gal, 2.5 gal, 5 gal |

SPECIMEN
COLLECTION
Use capillary
blood or freshly drawn venous blood that has not been treated with anticoagulants.
Hemolysis will render the sample unsatisfactory.
PROCEDURE
1.
Fix Blood films in absolute methyl alcohol for 30 seconds..
2. Transfer
the fixed smear to the eosinate stain (Wright's Dip Stat #2) for six seconds.
3. Rinse
the slide in deionized or distilled water.
4. Immerse
the rinsed smear in polychrome stain (Wright's Dip Stat #3) for twenty seconds.
5. Rinse
with distilled or deionized water and air dry.
* Staining
times vary with the thickness of the slide. Exact staining time should be
established by each laboratory.

SOURCES
OF ERROR
1. Staining
time will vary.
2. Blood
smears should be thin.
3. The
rinsing solution should be distilled or deionized water. Tap water is unacceptable
because the chlorine will bleach the stain.
4. White
cells will degrade in stored smears. Smears should be fixed and stained within
about one hour of production.
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