Publications by authors named "Gilmore D"

Local application of collars containing 25% methoxamine, 50% or 75% tyramine or 50% norephedrine to both vasa deferentia of rats caused a reduction in fertility but not in their ability to mate. A gradual return to fertility was seen in those animals which received the lower dose of tyramine or norephedrine, while the other treatments caused a permanent reduction in fertility. The cause of sterility was production of azoospermic ejaculates resulting from either a block in sperm transport in the vas deferens or from a deficiency in the ejaculatory mechanism.

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The sympathomimetic drugs noradrenaline, methoxamine, tyramine and norephedrine caused rhythmic contractions in isolated human vasa deferentia. Provided the drug was not washed out, these contractions lasted for the entire duration of the experiment (4-6 h). These contractions were mediated via alpha-adrenoreceptors.

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Immunoreactive LH-RH was present in all the hypothalamic and cortical extracts of mid-term human fetuses studied and in the cortical tissue removed from the two youngest fetuses. Gonadotrophin-releasing activity of hypothalamic and cortical extracts was demonstrated by the significant rises of circulating LH after infusion into oestrogen and progesterone-primed ovariectomized rats.

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The parents of 50 children with Down's syndrome were interviewed to find what sort of information they were given at the time of diagnosis and what arrangements were made for the child's future. Particular emphasis was placed upon the method and timing of giving the parents the diagnosis, the utilization of community resources to help the family and what information they would have liked to have been given in retrospect. The ages of the children ranged between three months and eight years at the time of the survey.

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A highly sensitive radioimmunoassay for the gonadotropin releasing hormone has been developed in order to study its physiological importance in man. In view of the expected low concentrations in peripheral blood, large volumes of human plasma were extracted by two different methods and characteristics of the radioimmunoassayable material compared with those of synthetic decapeptide and extracts of human hypothalami. The results indicate that radioimmunoassayable gonadotropin releasing hormone is present in some human plasmas but the plasma concentration are less than 2.

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The system under development has a large counting rate capability; this is extremely important where the total background count exceeds the total counts in the signals of interest. Its spatial resolution is of the order of one mm, which is perfectly adequate for neutron work, while the screen size of 400 mm is reasonable. The main limitation of the system is its limited counting efficiency, and this is directly attributable to the optical self-absorption of the neutron phosphor.

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