safranine-t and benzidine

safranine-t has been researched along with benzidine* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for safranine-t and benzidine

ArticleYear
Bladder cancer mortality of workers exposed to aromatic amines: an updated analysis.
    British journal of cancer, 1991, Volume: 63, Issue:3

    Topics: 1-Naphthylamine; 2-Naphthylamine; Benzidines; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Occupational Diseases; Occupational Exposure; Phenazines; Risk; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms

1991
Determination of small quantities of sulfate (0-12 nmol) in serum, urine, and cartilage of the mouse.
    Analytical biochemistry, 1987, Volume: 163, Issue:2

    The colorimetric benzidine method of K. S. Dodgson and B. Spencer (1953, Biochem. J. 55, 436-440) for the measurement of inorganic sulfate can be scaled down about 100 times by using disposable 96-well microplates instead of individual cuvettes. Ten-microliter samples of serum and urine, derived from mice, can be analyzed in a simple, rapid, and reliable way without sacrificing the animals. Without prior isolation of sulfated glycosaminoglycans, ester sulfate in mouse patellar cartilage is liberated quantitatively as inorganic sulfate upon acid hydrolysis in 3 M HCl for 16 h at 80 degrees C. To this end the articular cartilage layer of the patella must be separated in toto from the underlying bone. Subsequent hydrolysis in polypropylene tubes gives accurate results. In contrast, hydrolysis in borosilicate glass vials is useless, since nanomoles of sulfate added cannot be recovered adequately. The thin patellar cartilage layer obtained from 10-week-old male mice contains about 5 nmol of sulfate, an amount easily measured with the developed microplate benzidine method.

    Topics: Animals; Benzidines; Cartilage; Colorimetry; Glycosaminoglycans; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Phenazines; Sulfates

1987
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