Diatrizoate Meglumine and Diatrizoate Sodium Solution

Keyword(s):  
1990 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 858-868
Author(s):  
Yusuke SUZUKI ◽  
Toyohiko TAKEDA ◽  
Kunihei INAZU ◽  
Teruo SAKAMOTO

Author(s):  
Yasumitsu Mizobata ◽  
Junichiro Yokota ◽  
Tetsuya Matsuoka ◽  
Hiroshi Horikawa ◽  
Keisuke Nakai ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 390-393
Author(s):  
D G Arsjutov

Aim. To study the impact of platelet-rich blood autoplasma on the capability of the retinal regeneration in nonexudative forms of central chorioretinal dystrophy with the use of microinvasive vitreoretinal surgery. Methods. Surgical treatment was performed on 14 patients with central chorioretinal dystrophy aged 29 to 87 years. The surgery technique consisted of 3-port 25+, 27 Ga vitrectomy with posterior hyaline membrane and internal limiting membrane peel with subsequent central retinal exfoliation with 38 Ga cannula and balanced sodium solution and subretinal injection to the formed in macule space 0.1-0.2 ml of platelet-rich autolplasma. Results. As a result of the treatment according to this technique during the long-term period after the surgery (1 to 9 months) thickness of fovea reduced to 85-150 µm in average staying stable during the whole observation period. In 9 patients pigment epithelium thickened from 24 to 38 µm in parafoveolar area and fovea area. Corrected vision in 3 patients reached 0.1, and in the rest it did not exceed 0.06, herewith, all patients noted consistently improved vision. All patients had favorable evolution of photosensitivity according to microperimetry in average from 0.1-0.5 to 8.5-11 dB with a tendency of fixation point movement from periphery to the center. Conclusion. Vitreoretinal surgery 25+, 27 Ga for nonexudative forms of central chorioretinal dystrophy with the use of subretinal injection of platelet-rich autoplasma is a microinvasive, safe, effective method of the treatment of such pathology improving vision characteristics and anatomical and physiological characteristics of the eye involved.


1983 ◽  
Vol 35 (3b) ◽  
pp. 249-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Dickinson ◽  
D. J. Nicholas

Four experiments investigated the processes by which a motivationally-induced change in the value of the training reinforcer affects instrumental performance. Initially, thirsty rats were trained to lever press for either a sodium or non-sodium solution. In Experiment I sodium-trained rats responded faster in extinction following the induction of a sodium appetite, but not following either food or water deprivation. Thus, enhanced extinction performance depends upon the relevance of the training reinforcer to the test drive state. The remaining experiments examined the role of the instrumental contingency. Animals received response-contingent presentations of one solution alternated either within (Experiments II and III) or between sessions (Experiment IV) with non-contingent presentations of another solution. Neither procedure yielded convincing evidence that contingent sodium presentations generated more responding in extinction under a sodium appetite than did non-contingent sodium presentations. On the basis of these results, we argue that the instrumental contingency itself does not play a major role in this irrelevant incentive effect.


1864 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 555-559

The aim of the present communication is to describe a simple mode of measuring the chemical action of total daylight, adapted to the purpose of regular meteorological registration. This method is founded upon that described by Prof. Bunsen and the author in their last Memoir on Photochemical Measurements, depending upon the law that equal products of the intensity of the acting light into the times of insolation correspond within very wide limits to equal shades of tints produced upon chloride-of-silver paper of uniform sensitiveness—light of the intensity 50, acting for the time 1, thus producing the same blackening effect as light of the intensity 1 acting for the time 50. For the purpose of exposing this paper to light for a known but very short length of time, a pendulum photometer was constructed; and by means of this instrument a strip of paper is so exposed that the different times of insolation for all points along the length of the strip can be calculated to within small fractions of a second, when the duration and amplitude of vibration of the pendulum are known. The strip of sensitive paper insolated daring the oscillation of the pendulum exhibits throughout its length a regularly diminishing shade from dark to white; and by reference to a Table, the time needed to produce any one of these shades can be ascertained. The unit of photo-chemical action is assumed to be that intensity of light which produces in the unit of time (one second) a given but arbitrary degree of shade termed the standard tint. The reciprocals of the times during which the points on the strip have to be exposed in order to attain the standard tint, give the intensities of the acting light expressed in terms of the above unit. By means of this method a regular series of daily observations can be kept up without difficulty; the whole apparatus needed can be packed up into small space; the observations can be carried on without regard to wind or weather; and no less than forty-five separate determinations can be made upon 36 square centimetres of sensitive paper. Strips of the standard chloride-of-silver paper tinted in the pendulum photometer remain as the basis of the new mode of measurement. Two strips of this paper are exposed as usual in the pendulum photometer: one of these strips is fixed in hyposulphite-of-sodium solution, washed, dried, and pasted upon a board, furnished with a millimetre-scale. This fixed strip is now graduated in terms of the unfixed pendulum strip by reading off, by the light of a soda-flame, the position of those points on each strip which possess equal degrees of tint, the position of the standard tint upon the unfixed strip being ascertained for the purpose of the graduation. Upon this comparison with the unfixed pendulum strip depends the subsequent use of the fixed strip. A detailed description of the methods of preparing and graduating the strips, and of the apparatus for exposure and reading, is next given. The following conditions must be fulfilled in order that the method may be adopted as a trustworthy mode of measuring the chemical action of light:— 1st. The tint of the standard strips fixed in hyposulphite must remain perfectly unalterable during a considerable length of time. 2nd. The tints upon these fixed strips must shade regularly into each other, so as to render possible an accurate comparison with, and graduation in terms of, the unfixed pendulum strips. 3rd. Simultaneous measurements made with different strips thus graduated must show close agreement amongst themselves, and they must give the same results as determinations made by means of the pendulum photometer, according to the method described in the last memoir.


2011 ◽  
Vol 94-96 ◽  
pp. 1180-1183
Author(s):  
Jing Hai Zhou ◽  
Wei Wei Wang ◽  
Xian Hong Meng

Many Marine environment or other corrosion in the concrete structure under the condition of fatigue cycle usually bear, thus make these components of fatigue and corrosion under coupling effect, thus speeding up the process of structure component, killing structure degradation of corrosion fatigue. This paper using self-designed corrosion fatigue loading test device, studied in sodium solution of concrete under the action of erosion strength increasing regularity, results show that the concrete strength by corrosion fatigue than fatigue specimen attenuation extent.


1994 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 212-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Han ◽  
K. H. Chang ◽  
D. H. Han ◽  
K. M. Yeon ◽  
M. C. Han

Superselective intraarterial injections of thiopental sodium solution for evaluation of local brain function were performed before embolization in 38 consecutive patients with supratentorial arteriovenous malformations to evaluate the role of the test using thiopental sodium solution. Thiopental sodium (30–50 mg) was injected in 68 arteries (44 middle cerebral arteries, 13 anterior cerebral arteries, 7 posterior cerebral arteries, 3 external carotid arteries, and 1 thalamo-perforating artery) through superselective microcatheters just before the injection of cyanoacrylate mixture for the embolization. The test was negative in 57 arteries and there were neurologic dysfunctions in 3 of them after embolization. The neurologic deficits in these cases were caused by reflux of embolic material, spasm of the main arterial trunk, or neglected mild sensory change, respectively, and there was no real false-negative test. The embolization could not be performed due to positive test in 9 arteries. Two arteries with positive tests but acceptable symptoms were embolized and the same neurologic deficits developed immediately after embolization. There was no local arterial complication by an injection of the thiopental sodium solution. All neurologic deficits caused by positive tests developed immediately and were completely relieved within 5 min without specific management. Superselective intraarterial injection of thiopental sodium solution is a safe and reliable test for the evaluation of local brain function before embolization of supratentorial arteriovenous malformations.


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