Science, asked by rautsavita7694, 1 month ago

What is not the aim of fixation?
Answer
A. O To prevent putrefaction
B. O Remove excess water from the
tissue
c. O Render the tissue suitable for
subsequent staining
D. O To prevent autolysis​

Answers

Answered by rachel2937
1

Answer:

The aim of fixation is to preserve cells or tissues in as near a life like condition as possible, prevent autolysis and putrefaction, and protect the tissue from subsequent processing. Fixatives have different actions e.g. crosslinking, precipitative, coagulativ

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Answered by brainlysme9
0

Render the tissue suitable for subsequent staining(option c) is not the aim of fixation.

A pathologist can evaluate the results of the microscope examination after the tissue sample has undergone fixation, processing, embedding, sectioning, and staining. The exploratory inquiry at hand determines the histological stains used for a specific specimen.

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