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  • 1980-1984  (2)
  • Affinity chromatography  (1)
  • Retrograde tracing  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Affinity chromatography ; cord blood ; diabetes ; diabetic pregnancy ; glycosylated fetal haemoglobin ; glycosylated fetal plasma proteins ; glycosylated haemoglobins ; glycosylated plasma proteins
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We have used a simple affinity chromatography method to measure total glycosylated haemoglobins and glycosylated plasma proteins in maternal and cord blood at 50 normal deliveries. The affinity method gives equal weighting to glycosylated haemoglobins including haemoglobin F in cord blood. The mean values for glycosylated haemoglobins in maternal blood (6.49±1.2%) were significantly higher than those in cord blood (3.85±1.0%; p〈0.001). The difference with glycosylated plasma proteins was less marked (maternal blood 5.61±0.9% and cord blood 4.75±0.6%; p〈0.001). A contributory factor to these differences was the decrease in glucose concentration from 4.53±0.99 mmol/l in maternal blood to 3.59±0.8 mmol/l in cord blood. The results obtained at the birth of six children to diabetic mothers showed the same trends although the mean values for glycosylated haemoglobins (maternal blood 9.27±2.3%, cord blood 4.21±0.9%), glycosylated plasma proteins (maternal blood 7.44±1.6%, cord blood 5.45±1.7%) and glucose (maternal blood 10.22±7.3 mmol/l, cord blood 5.18±3.4 mmol/l) were higher in all samples than for the deliveries to non-diabetic mothers.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 51 (1983), S. 433-442 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Optic axons ; Regeneration ; Optictectum ; Retrograde tracing ; Goldfish
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary To compare the distributions of normal and regenerated optic axons in the goldfish tectum, small groups of axons crossing the rostromedial tectum were cut and filled with horseradish peroxidase which subsequently revealed the retinal locations of their somata. In normal fish, the peroxidase-filled ganglion cells were virtually confined to a narrow arc spanning the ventronasal quadrant of the retina. In fish with regenerated visual projections (50–736 days after optic nerve transection, optic nerve crush or deflection of optic axons to the ipsilateral tectum) the filled cells were distributed across the full extent of the retina from centre to periphery and were less rigidly confined within appropriate quadrants. The absence of any detectable arc of filled cells in the ventronasal quadrant after regeneration showed that few, if any, of the regenerated axons followed their original paths across the tectum. Quantitative analysis of local cell distributions indicated that axons were re-routed independently rather than in groups. Nevertheless, axons consistently displayed a crude bias towards appropriate tectal regions, even in ipsilateral tecta where the relative positions of these regions are inverted. These results imply that regenerating optic axons are widely scattered by the effects of surgery. They may subsequently show preferences for appropriate central paths but with a resolution too low to define much more than the orientation of the retino-tectal map. Since there is both anatomical and electrophysiological evidence that regenerated optic terminal arborizations eventually adopt a precise retinotopic arrangement, this arrangement must chiefly reflect ordering mechanisms which act in the final stages of axon growth or synapsis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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