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Dr.T.V.Rao MD
The phenomenon of fluorescence was known by the middle of the nineteenth century. British scientist Sir George G. Stokes first made the observation that the mineral fluorspar exhibits fluorescence when illuminated with ultraviolet light, and he coined the word "fluorescence"
Dr.T.V.Rao MD
The fluorescence microscope was devised in the early part of the twentieth century by August Khler, Carl Reichert, and Heinrich Lehmann, among others. However, the potential of this instrument was not realized for several decades, and fluorescence microscopy is now an important (and perhaps indispensable) tool in cellular biology.
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The Conventional microscope uses visible light (400-700 nanometers) to illuminate and produce a magnified image of a sample.
A fluorescence microscope,
uses a much higher intensity light source which excites a fluorescent species in a sample of interest. This fluorescent species in turn emits a lower energy light of a longer wavelength that produces the magnified image instead of the original light source.
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What is Fluorescence?
Fluorescence is light
produced by a substance when it is stimulated by another light. Fluorescence is called "cold light" because it does not come from a hot source like an incandescent light bulb.
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Fluorescence, describes
light emission that continues only during the absorption of the excitation light. The time
interval between absorption of excitation light and emission of re-radiated light in fluorescence is of extraordinarily short duration, usually less than a millionth of a second.
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Specifically, a dichroic
mirror is used to separate the excitation and emission light paths. Within the objective, the excitation/emission share the same optics. In a fluorescence microscope, the dichroic mirror separates the light paths.
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The sensitivity is high enough to detect as few as 50 molecules per cubic micrometer.
Different molecules can now be stained with different colors, allowing multiple types of molecule to be tracked simultaneously. These factors combine to give fluorescence microscopy a clear advantage over other optical imaging techniques, for both in vitro and in vivo imaging.
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Fluorescence Microscope
Fluorescence
microscopy by
epi-illumination
is the most commonly used method today because it is simple to do, needs relatively simple Dr.T.V.Rao MDequipment, and is efficient.
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Epifluorescence Microscopy
Epifluorescence microscopy is a method of fluorescence microscopy that is widely used in life sciences The excitatory light is passed from above (or, for inverted microscopes, from below), through the objective lens and then onto the specimen instead of passing it first through the specimen. The fluorescence in the specimen gives rise to emitted light which is focused to the detector by the same objective that is used for the excitation
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Most specimens for fluorescence microscopy must be stained. Fluorescent stains are called "fluorochromes." Acridine orange, auramine O, and fluorescent antibody (FA) are the fluorochromes used most.
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uses of fluorescence
microscopy are many and varied. They are in medicine, public health, biological research, and environment monitoring. The most common application is medical
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Step 1
on the side of the microscope that turns on the light. Turn the microscope on. Write down the exact time you turn on the light. The florescent light is mercury-based, and a time log must be kept for exposure and use of the light. Dr.T.V.Rao MD
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Locate the toggle switch on the right side of the microscope between the oculars and objectives. This switch controls the shutter for the mercury light to the objective lens.
Step 2
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Step 3
dye for your object (this will depend entirely on what you are going to be studying). The most common dyes include I3 (for use with CTC, DTAF and fluorescein), A (for use with DAPI and f420), N21 (for use with Rhoda mine) and Dr.T.V.Rao MDL3 (for use with fluorescein).
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Step 4
Put the filter (dye) into the tray operated by the silver sliding knob. To remove the tray, simply pull the silver knob out.
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Step 5
Select the lens you would like to use. The 63x objective lens will have the highest numerical aperture. The 100x objective lens will have the highest magnitude that can be used with the mercurybased florescent light source.
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Step 6
Turn the light off when finished, and mark the time. Wait 30 minutes before turning the light back on, or the lamp could explode. It is a good idea to keep track of how many hours the lamp is in use and replace it according to the manufacture's guidelines.
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Step 7
Clean off the microscope lens with lens paper, or if really dirty, use a cotton swap and glass cleaner.
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Direct Immunofluorescence
A specific antibody is labeled by chemically attaching a fluorophore to form what is known as a conjugate, which is then spread on a microscope slide containing the suspected presence of a particular antigen known to stimulate production of the antibody. If the antigen is present, the labeled antibody conjugate binds to the antigen and remains bound to the specimen after it is washed. The presence of the chemically attached fluorescent conjugate and antigen is demonstrated when the fluorophore is excited at its excitation peak, and the subsequent emission intensities at various wavelengths can then be observed visually or captured by a detector system (digital or traditional camera).
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Indirect Immunofluorescence
Indirect immunofluorescence here serum possibly containing unlabeled antibody and its related, but known, antigen are incubated together. A fluorochrome conjugated to an antihuman antibody (if the specimen being tested is human) is then placed on the slide containing the unlabeled antibody-antigen. If indeed, there has been an antigen-antibody reaction, the fluorochrome-labeled anti-human antibody attaches itself to the complex formed by the antigen and antibody. Subsequently, the labeled grouping of antigen, antibody, and fluorochrome labeled anti-human antibody is excited at the peak wavelength intensity for that fluorochrome and any resulting emission is observed. The indirect immunofluorescence technique reduces the necessity of keeping in stock large numbers of labeled antibodies, and also usually results in greater fluorescence intensity. fluorescence,
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Advantages of fluorescence microscopy are due to its sensitivity, specificity, rapid testing, and easy use. It is easy to set up and do, provides rapid diagnostic tests, and can be very specific. Modern technology allows conversion of most compound microscopes easily and economically into effective fluorescence microscopes.
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The Auramine-rhodamine stain is more sensitive than the Zhiel-Neelson and more cost effective.
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Suspend 25 g auramine-O in 3000 ml of ethanol in a 5litre conical flask. Add a magnet and place on a magnetic stirrer until solution is complete. Dissolve 250 g phenol in 5300 ml of distilled water. Mix the phenol solution with alcoholic auramine solution. Store in an amber colored bottle at room temp. for up to 3 mths. Dr.T.V.Rao MD Filter before use.
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Dissolve sodium chloride in distilled water Add conc. hydrochloric acid, mix thoroughly. Add alcohol Can be stored at room temperature for 3 months.
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Dissolve and store in an amber colored bottle Stays at room temperature for up to 3 months.
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Staining procedure
Place the slides on a staining rack, with the smeared side facing up, the slides not touching each other Flood the slides with freshly filtered auraminephenol. Let stand for 7-10 min. Wash well with running water Decolorize with acid-alcohol for 1-2 min. Wash as before with water and slope the slides to air dry Counter stain with 0.1% KMNO4 for 30 seconds Dr.T.V.Rao MD
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Staining procedure Avoid under-decolorization. AFBs are difficult to overdecolorize since the decolorization procedure with acidalcohol is relatively milder than the 25% H2SO4 used in Z-N.
Precautions
Thick smears: Interfere with decolorization, and counter stain. Mask the presence of AFB and tendency to flake, resulting in loss of smear material and possible transfer of material to other slides
EXAMINATION PROCEDURE
The mercury vapor lamp : It takes about 10
min. to reach full intensity Examination: Using the low power objective (100-150x) first examine a known pos. slide to ensure that the microscope is correctly set up Appearance: Bacilli appear as slender bright yellow fluorescent rods, standing out clearly against a dark background Positive: Minimum of 4 AFB in the entire
smear.
Negative: Less than 4 bacilli ( No.of bacilli to be recorded)
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EXAMINATION PROCEDURE
The mercury vapor lamp : It takes about 10 min. to reach full intensity Examination: Using the low power objective (100-150x) first examine a known pos. slide to ensure that the microscope is correctly set up Appearance: Bacilli appear as slender bright yellow fluorescent rods, standing out clearly against a dark background Positive: Minimum of 4 AFB in the entire smear. Negative: Less than 4 bacilli ( No.of bacilli to be recorded)
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Morphological Confirmation: With a high power objective (400600x) - To be done with all doubtful smears as well as scanty positives. Examination: At least three horizontal sweeps on the entire smear. Gradation: Grade positive smears into three degrees of positivity using the high power objective
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ZN
1000x 0 1-9/100FIELD
REPORT
NO.AFB
250x 0
450x 0 DIVIDE
630x 0
EXACT NO
by 10
by 4
by 2
10-99/FIELD
1-10/FIELD >10/FIELD
1+
2+ 3+
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Report
No AFB seen Doubtful: repeat 1+ 2+ 3+ 4+
200x,250x
0 1-2/30F* 1-9/10F 1-9/F 10-90/F >90/F
400x,450x
0 1-2/70F 2-18/50F 4-36/10F 4-36/F >36/F
FM Grading
No. of bacilli per HPF
Less than 6 per field
Grade
1+
2+
3+
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The QBC Malaria Test is a fluorescence microscopybased malaria diagnostic test that speeds and simplifies malaria detection
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The method is centrifugation and thereby concentration of the red blood cells in a predictable area of the QBC tube, making detection easy and fast. Red cells containing Plasmodia are less dense than normal ones and concentrate just below the leukocytes, at the top of the erythrocyte column. The float forces all the surrounding red cells into the 40 micron space between its outside circumference and the inside of the tube. Since the parasites contain DNA which takes up the acridine orange stain, they appear as bright specks of light among the non-fluorescing red cells. Virtually all of the parasites found in the 60 microliter of blood can be visualized by rotating the tube under the microscope. A negative test can be reported within one minute and positive result within minutes. Dr.T.V.Rao MD
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MICROSCOPIC EXAMINATION 0.1% Calcofluor White (W/V) Solution (a) Use commercially available solution cellufluor 17352 (Polysciences, Washington, PA), fluorescent brightener 28.F6259 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), 1 gm (b) distilled water, 100 ml (c) Gently heat if precipitate develops. Filter if precipitate persists. Store at 25 C in the dark. (3) Commercially prepared kits are
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Microscope filter system: An epifluorescent microscope equipped with a mercury vapor lamp and either an ultraviolet (UV) or blueviolet (BV) excitation filters to achieve radiation on the slide below 412 nm should be used since the maximum absorbance of CFW is 347 nm.
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Fluorescent stains for demonstrating Cryptosporidium spp. oocysts include Auramine- rhodamine, Auramine Carbol Fuschin and Acridine orange . Confirmatory staining of suspected oocyst by another method may be required
Casemore 1984
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Fluorescent stains
Cryptosporidium spp.
Fluorescent stains for demonstrating Cryptosporidium spp. oocysts include Auramine- rhodamine, Auramine Carbol Fuschin and Acridine orange . Confirmatory staining of suspected oocyst by another method may be required
Casemore 1984
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Polyclonal AB, raised against 18 and 20 kDa C. parvum coproantigen, were used to react with C. parvum sporozoites in an immunofluorescence assay. Monoclonal antibody reagents offer increased sensitivity and an excellent alternative to conventional staining methods. These reagents are helpful when screening large numbers of patients or those with minimal symptoms. Elimination of the problems of false-positive and Dr.T.V.Rao MD 52 false-negative results with routine staining methods.
Several Immuno Diagnostic Methods are available Using the Fluorescent Techniques, which needs specific testing material and to follow specific protocols. The Technologists should be familiar with literature available with the Kits
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Created by Dr.T.V.Rao MD for e learning resources for Microbiologists in the Developing world
Email doctortvrao@gmail.com
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