230 CHAPTEE XV III. 



385. Merkel's Carmine and Indigo-Carmine in One Stain 

 (MERKEL, Unters. anat. Anst. Rostock, 1874; Month. Mic. Jo-urn., 1877, 

 pp. 242 and 317). 



Also NORKIS and SHAKESPEARE, Amer. Journ. Ned. Sci., January. 1877 ; 

 MERKEL, Mon. Mic. Journ., 1877, p. 242 ; MARSH, Section Cutting, p. 85 ; 

 BAYERL, Arch. Mih. Anat., xxiii, 18S5, pp. 36, 37 ; MACALLUM, Trans. 

 Canacl. Instit., ii, 1892, p. 222 ; Journ. Roy. Mic. Soc. t v, 1892, p. 698. 



386. MAYER'S Carmalum (or Hsemalum) and Indigo Carmine 

 in one Stain. MAYER (Mitth. Zuol. Stat. Neapel, xii, 1890, 

 p. 320) obtains very good results by taking a solution of 0*1 

 grin, of indigo-carmine in 50 c.c. of distilled water, or 

 5 per cent, alum solution, and combining it with from four 

 to twenty volumes of carmalum or haemal urn. 



387. Carmine and Picro-Indigo-Carmine (RAMON Y CAJAL, Rev. 

 de Cienc. med., 1895 ; CALLEJA, Rev. trim. Microgr., ii, 1897, 

 p. 101 ; Zeit. wiss. Mik. } xv, 1899, p. 323). For use after a 

 carmine stain, RAMON takes a solution of 0'25 grin, of 

 indigo-carmine in 100 grins, saturated aqueous solution 

 of picric acid. Stain (sections) for five to ten minutes, 

 wasli in weak acetic acid, then in water, then remove the 

 excess of picric acid with absolute alcohol, clear and 

 mount. 



RAMON also (Element os de Histologia, 1897 ; quoted from 

 La Cellule, xix, 190] , p. 212) employs the picro-indigo 

 mixture after Magenta ; stain strongly in saturated solution 

 of magenta, rinse in water until no more colour comes away, 

 and pass into the indigo mixture. See also BORREL, Ann. 

 lust. Pasteur, 1901, p. 57, or LEE et HENNEGUY, Trait c, 

 p. 268. 



388. Carmine and Anilin Blue (or Bleu Lumiere, or Bleu de 

 Lyon) (DuvAr,, Precis de Technique Microscopique, 1878, p. 

 225). Stain with carmine; dehydrate, and stain for a few 

 minutes (ten minutes for a section of nerve-centres) in a 

 solution of ten drops of saturated solution of anilin blue in 

 alcohol to 10 grms. of absolute alcohol. Clear with 

 turpentine, without further treatment with alcohol, and 

 mount in balsam. 



Other authors recommend, instead of anilin blue, bleu de 

 Lyon, dissolved in 70 per cent, alcohol acidulated with acetic 

 acid (MAUKICH and SCHULGIN), or bleu lumieiv. 



