In the staining procedure, tissue sections are stained with a solution consisting of one of the luxol fast blues and ethanol (sometimes, glacial acetic acid is added). • Rinse in distilled water. • Stain sections in
picro-sirius red solution at room temperature for 30 minutes. • Rinse in multiple changes of distilled water. • Counterstain with Harris'
hematoxylin for 3 minutes. • Rinse in tap water for 3-5 minutes. • Dehydrate in successively increasing concentrations of ethanol from 70% (or 95%) to 99%. In pure LFB stains, myelin fibers appear blue, with areas of the highest concentration of myelin appearing darker. The blue stain appears on a white background. Typically,
cresyl violet is used as
counterstain. Cresyl violet binds to
Nissl substance, which is concentrated around a neural cell's
nucleus; such a counterstain allows differentiation between myelenated axons,
cell bodies, and unmyelenated axons or
glial cells. In such a stain,
myelin fibers appear blue,
neuropil appears pink (or faint purple), and neuron cell bodies appear purple. ==Other combination methods==