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  • Book
    Veit Peter Gabel, editor.
    Summary: This book presents and analyses the most recent research dedicated to restoring vision in individuals who are severely impaired or blind from retinal disease or injury. It is written by the leading groups worldwide who are at the forefront of developing artificial vision. The book begins by discussing the difficulties in comparing and interpreting functional results in the area of very low vision and the principal prospects and limitations of spatial resolution with artificial tools. Further on, chapters are included by researchers who stimulate the surface or the pigment epithelial side of the retina and by experts who work on stimulating the optic nerve, the lateral geniculate body and the superficial layers of the visual cortex. Artificial Vision: A Clinical Guide collates the most recent work of key artificial vision research groups to explain in a comparable and stringent order their varying approaches, the clinical or preclinical outcomes and their achievements during the last years. Senior ophthalmic fellows and academic practitioners will find this guide to be an indispensable resource for understanding the current status of artificial vision. .
    Digital Access Springer 2017
  • Article
    Clarke JR, Gagnon RF, Gotch FM, Heyworth MR, Maclennan IC, Truelove SC, Waller CA.
    Clin Exp Immunol. 1977 May;28(2):292-301.
    The effect of prednisolone on various immunological parameters was studied in patients with ulcerative colitis in complete remission. The study was designed as a double blind trial in which patients received either prednisolone or a dummy preparation and the following observations were made:(1) The mean lymphocyte count fell from 1738 cells per mm3 to 501 cells/mm3 4 hr after prednisolone was given but by 24 hr was significantly elevated to 2399 cells/mm3; thereafter it returned to normal levels. (2) Surface marker assays of lymphocytes forming spontaneous sheep cell (E), Fc (EA), and C3 (EAC) rosettes; and cells bearing surface immunoglobulin fluctuated in approximately the same pattern as the total lymphocyte count. (3) The mitotic response to a sub-maximal stimulating dose of phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) was significantly depressed 4 hr after steroid administration but returned to normal by 24 hr. (4) Spontaneous and PHA-induced lymphocyte mediated cytotoxicity fell significantly by four hours and remained depressed to the end of steroid administration. The PHA-induced cytotoxicity was still significantly depressed 7 days after steroid administration was stopped. (5) K-cell cytotoxicity did not follow the general pattern and was only slightly reduced at four hours being lowest after 24 hr and still depressed 7 days after cessation of steroid administration. (6) The number of plasma cells in the rectal lamina propria showed no significant change after one week of steroid administration. (7) No significant changes occurred in any of the above assays, in the control group. (8) Polymorphonuclear leucocyte counts rose sharply by 4 hr in the patients receiving prednisolone. There was also a smaller but significant rise in the control group. They remained elevated for 7 days in the group receiving prednisolone, and subsequently fell to normal levels. The control group had returned to initial levels by 24 hr.
    Digital Access Access Options