Hi Steve,
That was one we are going to try
and probably a lot easier than making polymer gels etc. What would be the
easiest way to make it isotonic? Just add some conc saline solution to it?
Thanks
Cam
Cameron
J. Nowell
Microscopy Manager
Centre for
Advanced Microscopy
Ludwig Institute
for Cancer Research
PO Box 2008
Royal Melbourne
Hospital
Victoria, 3050
AUSTRALIA
Office: +61 3 9341 3155
Mobile: +61422882700
Fax: +61 3 9341 3104
From:
Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf
Of Stephen Cody
Sent: Monday, 23 March 2009 3:20 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: Optical Coupling Gels
Dear Cam,
Martin Harris (formerly OptiScan now BioPhotonics Australia) used KY jelly for
this purpose. Only warning would be if you were using it internally on exposed
tissue of the mouse you should make it isotonic. But it should be fine on the
skin of a mouse. I shouldn't imagine there would be anything in it to damage
the lens either.
All the best,
Steve Cody
Stephen H. Cody
Imaging
Research Fellow & Manager
Monash Micro Imaging – AMREP
6 Floor Burnet Tower
Alfred Medical Research & Education Precinct
89 Commercial Rd, Melbourne, Australia, 3004
Phone (Monash): (613) 990 30142
Phone (BakerIDI): (613) 8532 1580
Cameron Nowell wrote:
Hi List,
Has anyone had any experience in using optical gels? We are looking
at imaging lymphatic vessels in a mouse tail (still attached to a live mouse)
and eventually lymph nodes with our two photon system. The scope is fitted with
a 20x water immersion lens (NA 0.95) but we don’t want to submerge the whole
tissue. So ideally we need a thick gel that has the same RI of water and won’t
damage the objective.
I found one paper (Rothstein et al.) that use sorbitol
gelled with carbomer 940 to create a gel with a refractive index similar to
water. Is there any other gels that anyone has used before? I was thinking of
acrlyamide (polymerised) but cannot find the RI of it.
Cheers
Cam
Cameron
J. Nowell
Microscopy Manager
Centre for Advanced Microscopy
Ludwig Institute for Cancer
Research
PO Box 2008
Royal Melbourne Hospital
Victoria, 3050
AUSTRALIA
Office: +61 3 9341 3155
Mobile: +61422882700
Fax: +61 3 9341 3104
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