Fresh tissue can vary wildly in its level of difficulty to cut, due to a variety of factors like tissue type, and maturity of the animal (myelination). Often with other vibrating microtomes, they struggle to handle highly myelinated tissue or very soft neonatal tissue. The compression effect, along with multiple points of adjustment (speed, oscillation, and agarose concentration) enables our instrument to better handle “difficult” to cut tissue. The Compresstome® isn’t just able to cut thinner than the competition, we believe that the evidence shows that we also provide higher quality cuts that preserve cell surface structures and help increase the number of healthy to dead cells. Researchers at University of Minnesota use a Compresstome® to section live tissue in their procedure to locate, quantify, and phenotype antigen-specific CD8 T cells.
Upcoming Webinar | Dec. 17 | Serial Compresstome Vibratome Sectioning for Brain Mapping
Products
Applications
- Experiments
- Electron Microscopy
- Electrophysiology
- Genetic Sequencing (Single-Cell)
- High-throughput Sectioning
- Histopathology
- Imaging
- Immunohistochemistry
- In-situ-hybridization
- Large Sample Sectioning (Whole Organ)
- Materials & Bioengineering
- Organoids
- Organotypic Slice Culture
- Plant Research
- Precision Cut Tissue Slices
- Organs
- Brain (Fixed)
- Cartilage
- Eye
- Heart
- Liver
- Lymph-nodes
- Brain (Live or Acute)
- Embryo
- Gut (Intestines)
- Kidney
- Lung
- Tumors
- Animals
- Mouse
- Human
- Bird (Zebra Finch)
- Fish
- Frog
- Rat
- Non-Human Primates
- Chick
- Pig