RE: [Histonet] teeth sectioning

2013-03-05 Thread Jack Ratliff
s, Jack > Date: Mon, 4 Mar 2013 19:47:35 +0800 > From: e...@pigsqq.org > To: ratliffj...@hotmail.com > CC: turke...@gmail.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu; > jratl...@ratliffhistology.com > Subject: Re: Re: [Histonet] teeth sectioning > > Jack, > That sounds r

Re: Re: [Histonet] teeth sectioning

2013-03-04 Thread E. Wayne Johnson 朱稳森
Jack, That sounds really awesome. I did some work with the teeth of sows (female pigs) from specimens collected at slaughter. Those are very difficult to decalcify, and when finished, are likely to have no nuclear detail remaining. Interested to hear what you learn Wayne Johnson Beijing Enable

Re: [Histonet] teeth sectioning

2013-03-02 Thread David Kemler
- it's a must listen!   Yours, Dave   Give Dr. my best!  From: Jack Ratliff To: mesruh turkekul Cc: "histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu" ; Jack Ratliff Sent: Friday, March 1, 2013 9:11 PM Subject: Re: [Histonet] teeth sectioning Mes, This

Re: [Histonet] teeth sectioning

2013-03-01 Thread Jack Ratliff
Mes, This is a very good question and I look forward to answers from individuals that have accomplished this with PMMA and a rotary microtome with tungsten-carbide knives. If you are talking about an undecalcified specimen embedded in PMMA, then I would imagine that the age of the rat could aff