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preparatet

Preparatet is a term used in biology and medicine to refer to a prepared specimen intended for study, display, or diagnosis. In Swedish and other Scandinavian languages, preparatet (the definite form preparatet) means the prepared specimen; in English-language texts the term may be translated as the prepared specimen or prepared slide.

Definition and scope: A preparatet can be a microscope slide with a histological section, a whole-mount specimen,

Preparation process: Typical steps include fixation to preserve tissues, dehydration, clearing, embedding in resin or paraffin,

Applications: Preparatet is used in medical education for microscopy training, in research for analysis, and in

History: The practice of preparing specimens dates to early microscopy and anatomy; the term is rooted in

See also: histology, microtomy, mounting medium, prepared slide, specimen.

a
preserved
organ,
a
fossil,
a
mineral
sample,
or
an
anatomically
prepared
model.
The
common
feature
is
that
the
material
has
been
processed
to
stabilize
and
reveal
its
structure
for
examination.
sectioning
to
create
thin
slices,
and
staining
to
highlight
components.
For
non-biological
materials,
methods
may
include
mounting
and
labeling.
Permanent
preparations
are
designed
for
long-term
storage;
temporary
mounts
are
used
for
short-term
viewing.
museums
or
collections
for
display
and
curation.
Cataloging
and
metadata
are
often
maintained
to
track
provenance
and
staining
history;
digitization
may
produce
virtual
slides
or
high-resolution
images.
Latin
and
local
languages
of
scientific
education,
reflecting
the
long-standing
need
to
study
structure
at
small
scales.