Patent · US Expired

Method of preserving biological tissue specimens and method of infrared spectroscopic analysis which avoids the effects of polymorphs

US6270986A · kind A · utility

4Cited by
9References
13Claims
0Family size

Inventor

Key dates

Filing dateFeb 16, 1999
Grant dateAug 7, 2001
Priority date
Expiry dateFeb 16, 2019

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC G)Physics
  • CPC primaryG01N1/30
  • WIPO fieldMeasurement
  • WIPO sectorInstruments

Abstract

Tissue cells are preserved for infrared spectroscopic analysis by soaking a fresh cellular specimen in a 0.5 to 3.0% concentration inorganic salt solution, removing excess salt solution by centrifuging, placing the remaining damp specimen on an infrared optical window and then drying the specimen in a flow of room temperature air such that a dried, spectrally preserved specimen is obtained within 2 minutes. Alternatively, a cellular specimen in wet and fresh form is placed on the surface of a crystal water-soluble inorganic salt in the form of an infrared window to dissolve some of the salt and thereby cover the specimen with the dissolved salt solution and then drying the specimen as described above in less than 2 minutes. In both cases, the drying results in the formation of a salt crystal film covering the surface of the cells for spectral preservation. Another feature is an infrared spectroscopic method in which polymorph effects are avoided by obtaining an infrared spectrum of pure polymorph cells and subtracting this from superimposed infrared spectra of tissue cells and polymorphs.

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.