Microscope Health Dictionary

Microscope: From 3 Different Sources


An instrument for producing a magnified image of a small object. Microscopes are used to examine the structure and chemical composition of cells and tissues, and to investigate microorganisms and diseased tissues. In the operating theatre, microscopes are used in microsurgery.

Compound microscopes are the most widely used type. They have 2 lens systems (the objective and the eyepiece), mounted at opposite ends of a tube called the body tube. There is a stage to hold the specimen, a light source, and an optical condenser which concentrates the light. The maximum magnification is about 1,500 times.

Phase-contrast and interference microscopes are modified light microscopes that allow unstained transparent specimens to be seen. They are used for examining living cells and tissues.

Fluorescence microscopes use ultraviolet light to study specimens stained with fluorescent dyes.Electron microscopes give much higher magnifications than light microscopes by using a beam of electrons instead of light. There are 2 types: transmission electron microscopes (TEMs) and scanning electron microscopes (SEMs). TEMs can magnify up to about 5,000,000 times, enabling tiny viruses and molecules to be seen. SEMs have a lower maximum magnification (100,000 times), but produce 3-dimensional images. This makes them useful for studying surface structures of cells and tissues.

Health Source: BMA Medical Dictionary
Author: The British Medical Association
An optical instrument comprising adjustable magnifying lenses that greatly enlarge a small object under study – for example, an insect, blood cells, or bacteria. Some microscopes use electron beams to magnify minute objects such as chromosomes, crystals, or even large molecules. Optical microscopes are also used for MICROSURGERY when the area being operated on is otherwise inaccessible: for example, in eye and inner ear surgery; for the removal of tumours from the brain or spinal cord; and for resuturing damaged blood vessels and nerves.
Health Source: Medical Dictionary
Author: Health Dictionary
n. an instrument for producing a greatly magnified image of an object, which may be so small as to be invisible to the naked eye. Light or optical microscopes use light as a radiation source for viewing the specimen and combinations of lenses to magnify the image; these are usually an *objective and an *eyepiece. See also electron microscope; operating microscope; ultramicroscope. —microscopical adj. —microscopy n.
Health Source: Oxford | Concise Colour Medical Dictionary
Author: Jonathan Law, Elizabeth Martin

Electron Microscope

See MICROSCOPE.... electron microscope

Operating Microscope

A binocular MICROSCOPE used for MICROSURGERY on, for example, the EYE and middle EAR; this microscope is also used for suturing nerves and blood vessels damaged or severed by trauma and for rejoining obstructed FALLOPIAN TUBES in the treatment of INFERTILITY in women.... operating microscope



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