Lab Exercise 1 Micros
Lab Exercise 1 Micros
Lab Exercise 1 Micros
Lab Exercise #1
Microscopy: How to Use a Compound Light Microscope
I. OBJECTIVES:
Learn proper use and care of a compound light microscope
Learn of how to make a wet mount slide of a specimen
Learn how to make a bacterial smear
Practice simple staining of bacteria
View bacteria under oil immersion
Practice universal precautions
Use the terminology (listed) correctly
II. TERMINOLOGY: Students should define and use the following terms:
III. INTRODUCTION:
Principles of Microscopy
You will be using the microscope in various exercises throughout the course. It is your
responsibility to take proper care of the microscope and to learn to use it correctly. When
you retrieve your microscope, if you find it not in proper storage order, note that in the
microscope log.
You will be working with a compound light microscope. Magnification is the result of two
lenses: the objective and the ocular. The objectives, located on the rotary nosepiece,
achieve 4 different degrees of magnification:
The term field-of-view refers to how much of your sample, or the area of your sample, you
can see at any one time. The field of view decreases with increased magnification. Notice
this effect when you examine the items to be examined in this lab. You may need to center
your specimen, using the stage adjustment lever, as you increase magnification because
the item you want to observe is no longer in the center of the field of view.
A set of objectives on a microscope are said to be parfocal if you can change from one to
Lab Exercise #1 - Microscopy
another and still have your specimen in focus without having to focus more than a little.
This is a very convenient characteristic of a set of lenses, because as the magnification
increases, the depth-of-field decreases. If you had to find your specimen using a high-
magnification objective, it would probably take quite awhile, because you would tend to
miss the particular position where the specimen was in focus. With parfocal lenses, you can
find your specimen using low-power, long depth-of-field lenses, and then switch to a high-
magnification objective, knowing your specimen will be in focus (or very close to it) under
the high-magnification objective.
In many of the exercises in the following weeks it will be important for you to see individual
cells under the microscope. As you look at things under the scope today, distinguish those
things that you are supposed to observe from artifact things inadvertently introduced.
This is a fancy way to say that you should be able to distinguish what it is you should see
from junk. Be able to explain how you distinguish your sample from artifact.
Universal Precautions
At various times in your Health Careers labs you will use blood or body fluids as a sample.
In the clinical environment exposure to blood and body fluid is common. As you begin your
preparation for the clinical environment you must understand and practice universal
precautions. Universal precaution is an approach to infection control that treats all blood
and body fluids as if it is contaminated with a lethal infectious microbe (i.e. HIV, Hepatitis B,
etc). Due to the highly infectious and lethal nature of such agents we must be extremely
cautious. It is your responsibility to ensure that
No one comes in contact with your body fluids. Properly dispose of any
material that is contaminated with your body fluid immediately.
Do not come in direct contact with another person's body fluids.
Always wear gowns, gloves and safety glasses when engaging in risky
laboratory procedures such as obtaining or handling blood products. (Our lab
does not contain any procedures where this is an issue, but it is best to be
aware of the rule.)
In this lab you will sample your cheek cells. This sample is considered to be a biologically
hazardous material and should be treated accordingly.
*** STOP HERE FOR 1st LAB! YOU WILL DO THE FOLLOWING SECTION NEXT LAB
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Lab Exercise #1 - Microscopy
This material is adapted from the Applied Microbiology Laboratory Manual by Cynthia Schauer. For Power Point slides that correspond to this
lab material, see the Virtual Microbiology Classroom of the Science Prof Online website.