A properly prepared bacterial smear involves spreading a thin, even layer of bacterial sample on a clean microscope slide. This is usually achieved by using a sterile loop or swab. The slide is then heat-fixed to kill the bacteria and adhere them to the slide for staining and microscopic examination.
Advantages: It helps adhere bacterial cells to the slide, preventing them from washing away during staining. Also, it kills the bacteria, making them safe to handle and study under the microscope. Disadvantages: Heat fixing can distort the morphology of the bacterial cells, affecting the accuracy of the staining results. Overheating can also cause cell lysis, leading to inaccurate interpretation of the specimen.
When using broth as a bacterial source for preparing a smear, you would typically take a small amount of broth and place it on a slide for staining. With agar, you would use a loop or swab to pick up bacteria from a colony growing on an agar plate, then transfer it to a slide. This is because broth contains bacteria in suspension while agar contains bacteria in colonies.
A nucleus, mitochondria, or endoplasmic reticulum would not be found in a bacterial cell. Bacterial cells are prokaryotic and lack membrane-bound organelles typically found in eukaryotic cells.
it has more human cells actually the human body has more bacterial cells. Although it may seem more likely that the human body would have more human cells than bacterial cells. -Vasillisa
A pap smear does not take four months for results. Contact your health care provider directly to find out why the result is not in.
A properly prepared bacterial smear involves spreading a thin, even layer of bacterial sample on a clean microscope slide. This is usually achieved by using a sterile loop or swab. The slide is then heat-fixed to kill the bacteria and adhere them to the slide for staining and microscopic examination.
No, it does not need to be removed for a Pap smear. The annual gyn exam and testing can be done with the Nuva Ring in place. Not that I know of. I have had a pap smear done with it in. It may just be the practitioner's preference. If so, then she/he can probably remove and place it back immediately after the exam. But I would leave it in and inform my practitioner.
You absolutely do not heat fix a blood smear before staining, that is, if you are looking at the blood cells. For bacteria, why wouldn't you culture it first and then heat fix, stain etc. I don't think heat fixing the blood stain would damage the bacterial cells so much as make it hard to differentiate the bacterial cells from the dead, shriveled, ruined blood cells, unless maybe you have like an electron microscope or something.
Yes, you can get a pap smear before surgery for an ovarian cyst. It would be wise to do so, so that any abnormal result might be evaluated at the same time as the surgery.
Without heat fixing, the bacteria on the slide will not adhere properly, leading to poor attachment to the slide during staining. This may result in uneven staining, leading to difficulty in visualizing the bacterial cells clearly under the microscope. Proper heat fixing ensures that the bacteria are securely attached to the slide, allowing for better staining and clearer observation under the microscope.
No, perioral dermatitis is a result of a bacterial infection and would have nothing to do with zoom whitening.
Obtaining a pap smear uses medical asepsis. There is no break in skin when getting a pap smear.
to allow the excess water to dry out before heating. if heated right after, the water would cause the smear to overheat and denature some features in the stain. and those features would no longer be seen
Using condoms would be a great strategy if you had inflammation on your pap result. Condoms can lower the chances of infection spreading.
My mother has Alzheimer's and Arthritis in her knee and hip. She is 83, what can i give her, that would help her walk better.
Sure, it's possible for your water to break during a pap smear. There is nothing about the pap smear process that would cause your water to break.