Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage

Plastination is an anatomical technique for preserving biological tissues based on the principle of replacing body fluids with a curable polymer. An inconvenient aspect of this technique is the tissue shrinkage it causes; several studies seek ways to reduce or avoid this shrinkage. Additionally, there are no studies in the literature that quantitatively evaluate the use of low viscosity silicones in plastination having shrinkage of tissue as a parameter. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the use of Silicones S10 (Biodur) and P1 (Polisil) in the plastination of different types of biological tissues of a sliced human body, having as a parameter the tissue shrinkage caused in the forced impregnation stage. Human cardiac, pulmonary, splenic, renal, hepatic, muscular, and bone tissues were analyzed. For such purpose, a male human body was used, sliced in 13-15-mm-thick pieces, having as a parameter the before and the after plastination with the different silicones. The standard protocol of the plastination of the slices was followed: dehydration, forced impregnation, and curation. Half of the pieces obtained were plastinated with silicone P1 (group P1) and the other half with S10 (group S10). All tissues and anatomical segments analyzed in this study showed less or equal shrinkage when plastination of the control group (S10) was compared with that of the P1 group. Therefore, we concluded that the lower viscosity silicone promoted less tissue shrinkage, making it a viable alternative to the reference.

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Main Authors: Monteiro,Y.F., Silva,M.V.F., Bittencourt,A.P.S.V., Bittencourt,A.S.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica 2022
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2022000100646
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spelling oai:scielo:S0100-879X20220001006462022-09-30Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkageMonteiro,Y.F.Silva,M.V.F.Bittencourt,A.P.S.V.Bittencourt,A.S. Shrinkage Plastination Silicone Preservation Viscosity Plastination is an anatomical technique for preserving biological tissues based on the principle of replacing body fluids with a curable polymer. An inconvenient aspect of this technique is the tissue shrinkage it causes; several studies seek ways to reduce or avoid this shrinkage. Additionally, there are no studies in the literature that quantitatively evaluate the use of low viscosity silicones in plastination having shrinkage of tissue as a parameter. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the use of Silicones S10 (Biodur) and P1 (Polisil) in the plastination of different types of biological tissues of a sliced human body, having as a parameter the tissue shrinkage caused in the forced impregnation stage. Human cardiac, pulmonary, splenic, renal, hepatic, muscular, and bone tissues were analyzed. For such purpose, a male human body was used, sliced in 13-15-mm-thick pieces, having as a parameter the before and the after plastination with the different silicones. The standard protocol of the plastination of the slices was followed: dehydration, forced impregnation, and curation. Half of the pieces obtained were plastinated with silicone P1 (group P1) and the other half with S10 (group S10). All tissues and anatomical segments analyzed in this study showed less or equal shrinkage when plastination of the control group (S10) was compared with that of the P1 group. Therefore, we concluded that the lower viscosity silicone promoted less tissue shrinkage, making it a viable alternative to the reference.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAssociação Brasileira de Divulgação CientíficaBrazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research v.55 20222022-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2022000100646en10.1590/1414-431x2022e11962
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libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Monteiro,Y.F.
Silva,M.V.F.
Bittencourt,A.P.S.V.
Bittencourt,A.S.
spellingShingle Monteiro,Y.F.
Silva,M.V.F.
Bittencourt,A.P.S.V.
Bittencourt,A.S.
Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage
author_facet Monteiro,Y.F.
Silva,M.V.F.
Bittencourt,A.P.S.V.
Bittencourt,A.S.
author_sort Monteiro,Y.F.
title Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage
title_short Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage
title_full Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage
title_fullStr Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage
title_full_unstemmed Plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage
title_sort plastination with low viscosity silicone: strategy for less tissue shrinkage
description Plastination is an anatomical technique for preserving biological tissues based on the principle of replacing body fluids with a curable polymer. An inconvenient aspect of this technique is the tissue shrinkage it causes; several studies seek ways to reduce or avoid this shrinkage. Additionally, there are no studies in the literature that quantitatively evaluate the use of low viscosity silicones in plastination having shrinkage of tissue as a parameter. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the use of Silicones S10 (Biodur) and P1 (Polisil) in the plastination of different types of biological tissues of a sliced human body, having as a parameter the tissue shrinkage caused in the forced impregnation stage. Human cardiac, pulmonary, splenic, renal, hepatic, muscular, and bone tissues were analyzed. For such purpose, a male human body was used, sliced in 13-15-mm-thick pieces, having as a parameter the before and the after plastination with the different silicones. The standard protocol of the plastination of the slices was followed: dehydration, forced impregnation, and curation. Half of the pieces obtained were plastinated with silicone P1 (group P1) and the other half with S10 (group S10). All tissues and anatomical segments analyzed in this study showed less or equal shrinkage when plastination of the control group (S10) was compared with that of the P1 group. Therefore, we concluded that the lower viscosity silicone promoted less tissue shrinkage, making it a viable alternative to the reference.
publisher Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica
publishDate 2022
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2022000100646
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