I received the following from a researcher in the forensics department. I am 
not sure exactly what he wants and am not sure if this is possible.

I have been asked to assist a researcher in examining thin sections of 
coagulated blood drops in order to distniguish individual drops that were 
deposited at different times onto a substrate.  The investigator intends to 
deposit one drop of fresh blood onto a surface (perhaps paper or paraffin) and 
allow the blood to coagulate.  After that is coagulated he will deposit a 
second drop on top of the first.  Once the second drop is also coagulated he 
will preserve the sample as recommended for cross sectioning and evalaution.  
He intends to cut cross sections of the samples and examine them in order to 
determine how coagulation time changes the interface of the two droplets.  The 
underlying question is "does time/extent of coagulation of deposited blood 
affect the deposition pattern of additional layers of blood on top of the first 
layer?"  If the entire sample was encased in paraffin would there be a way to 
cut sections for microscopy, either with or without staining?

Roberta J Horner
Penn State
Animal Diagnostic Lab
_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

Reply via email to