If you don't know what the fixative is, can you justify using it for diagnosis? 
What will you say when the coroner asks you, "How did you choose which fixative 
to use?" Will you say "A salesman told me it was better than NBF" or will you 
say "I used it because our lab has a few books and we checked out the relevant 
references, discussed the issues and made a decision."?

The web site http://www.psl-equip.com/ultralight.php mentions two fixatives: 
"UL Formalin Fixative" and "UL Zinc Formalin Fixative", with no mention of 
ingredients other than formaldehyde. They don't even say whether the "formalin 
fixative" is aqueous, neutral, buffered, alcoholic, etc. 

Four coloured micrographs illustrate the page. They are pleasing to the eye, 
but their labels will not inspire confidence in any potential customers who 
have looked down a microscope and seen smooth muscle (which never has 
cross-striations), one or more oocytes ("human ova"), or axons in the 
cerebellar cortex (which are beautiful to behold but cannot be seen at all with 
H&E). 

The text alongside the photos insults the intelligence of anyone who might buy 
for a clinical or research lab. Example: "UltraLight HistologyTM Pristine 
Artifact Preventer. This is an additive for hematoxylin and eosin stains, which 
enhances color and extends shelf life up to two months ($$$ saving!!). This 
product is made to thermodynamically mop up excess formaldehyde (which can 
induce artifacts which destroy detail) and will improve staining." This is the 
language of the snake oil salesman. 

John Kiernan
Professor, Dept of Anatomy & Cell Biology
University of Western Ontario
London, Canada
= = = = = = = =
----- Original Message -----
From: Beth Millerman 
Date: Monday, February 15, 2010 14:20
Subject: [Histonet] Ultralight
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu

> 
> Felton,
> 
> My lab is Dermatology research and processes skin samples 
> only. I have
> tried the UltraLight Fixative by Pacific Southwest and found 
> that it works
> quite nicely . My H&E are picture perfect, and my 
> receptors on my IHC's
> stain well. I use it because it doesn't seem to be as harsh or 
> drying as
> 10% Formalin.
> 
> Beth Millerman/SWC
> Scientist
> Stiefel Laboratories, Inc,, a GSK company
> Direct Dial; 650-739-2982
> 
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Histonet mailing list
> Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet 
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