To Whom It May Concern, I am trying to contact Gayle Callis about the article she refers to in the text below. I would appreciate any information as I am trying to obtain a copy of this article. (I have already tried through the NSH website and I am just trying all of the avenues!)
Thank you, Amanda Woolsey, HTL Histology - Pathology Primary Children's Medical Center Salt Lake City, Utah [Histonet] growing gram pos and neg Gayle Callis gcallis <@t> montana.edu Mon Aug 20 10:30:38 CDT 2007 * Previous message: [Histonet] growing gram pos and neg * Next message: [Histonet] Safran du Gatinais * Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] Jennifer, There is a wonderful publication on making a combined Gram negative and Gram positive control in J of Histotechnology, December 2006. The author is Kristine J. Vaughn (do not have email contact here) but I will CC to my home email so I can put you in contact with her. She has reprints available, and will be delighted to send you one. Her method is simple and very effective, plus addresses biosafety issues with human tissue use. If you are a member of NSH, you can contact JOH and request this reprint free of charge too. Go to the NSH website, then click on JOH for this request. At 04:57 PM 8/17/2007, you wrote: >Hello all, > >I would like to hear your ideas on the best way to grow gram positive >and negative organisms in tissue. It would have to be tissue that is not >fixed so, what do you use? Did you grow the organisms, inject into >tissue and then put into incubator? or do you grow organisms on agar and >place tissue on it and incubate? or in a broth? Thank you for your >input. Gayle Callis MT,HT,HTL(ASCP) Research Histopathology Supervisor Veterinary Molecular Biology Montana State University - Bozeman PO Box 173610 Bozeman MT 59717-3610 _______________________________________________ Histonet mailing list Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet