Publications by authors named "Lamb A"

Those who attempt to characterize the functions of the cerebral hemispheres tend, broadly speaking, to do so either in terms of structural specializations or of different information-processing modes. Often little attention is paid to the possible importance, in determining the outcome of experiments in this field, of interhemispheric processes. An experiment is described which concurrently studies hemispheric response differences and interhemispheric processes.

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Recrudescent pulmonary melioidosis developed in two patients 12 and 16 years after their last travels to an endemic area. In one, a clinically silent prostatic abscess may have been the focus; and in both, the diagnosis was difficult to make even when the laboratory was notified of the possibility of infection with Pseudomonas pseudomallei. Recrudescent melioidosis should be considered in febrile patients who have been in endemic areas regardless of the interval from last exposure to the development of disease.

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A prospective study of 150 consecutive patients with burning mouth syndrome and with a minimum follow up period of 18 months is reported. Factors related to dentures, to vitamin B complex deficiency, and to psychological abnormalities were found to be important, and undiagnosed diabetes mellitus, reduced salivary gland function, haematological deficiencies, candidal infection, parafunctional habits, and allergy might also play a part. Given a protocol for management which takes all these factors into account, some two thirds of patients can be cured or have their symptoms improved.

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The adult motor system is precisely connected, topographically and functionally. This order is reached during embryonic development through a sequence of mechanisms which increasingly resolve the adult patterns of connectivity. First is axon guidance, which gives rise to a pattern of axon outgrowth leading to an approximation of the adult projections.

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A 26-year old white male with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus presented with asymptomatic bilateral lower limb swelling. An electrocardiogram was consistent with an inferior wall myocardial infarction of unknown age and a graded exercise test using the Bruce protocol was consistent with inferolateral ischemia. Subsequent cardiac catheterization showed severe, inoperable, three-vessel coronary artery disease.

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The phi-screen, a method of phylogenetic screening, can be employed to detect repetitive sequence families that differentially hybridize between closely related species. Such differences may involve sequence divergence or variations in copy number, including total presence versus absence of a family of repeated DNA. We present the results of a phi-screen comparing the human genome to that of the prosimian, Galago crassicaudatus.

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Several segments of spinal cord were removed from the cervical regions of stage-13 or -14 (day-2) chick embryos. After further incubation to day 17 or 18, the patterns of end-plate distribution and ATPase typing of muscle fibres in the anterior and posterior latissimus dorsi and the ulnimetacarpalis dorsalis, and the ATPase typing of the forearm muscles were examined. No differences from control embryos were found.

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The effect of vitamin A deficiency on the functional integrity of the reticuloendothelial system and the phagocytic capacity of circulating polymorphonuclear leukocytes was evaluated in retinoate-cycled vitamin A-deficient rats under conditions such that secondary dietary imbalances were eliminated. Kinetics of blood clearance of 2 X 10(7) Escherichia coli injected intravenously was depressed within 8 days of the withdrawal of retinoic acid; all animals were profoundly affected by Day 12 of deficiency. In vitro, the phagocytic activity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes was similarly affected; by Day 12 of deficiency, phagocytic capacity in all deficient animals was less than 40% of the appropriate control values (P less than 0.

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In Xenopus tadpoles one limb bud was removed before innervation and motoneurons from both sides of the spinal cord were induced to innervate the remaining limb. When examined after metamorphosis the motor innervation of the limb had the following characteristics. In agreement with previous findings a large proportion of contralateral motoneurons survived (51-82% of the ipsilateral numbers) and sent axons to the limb.

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This report concerns a mother and son with a small terminal deletion of the short arm of chromosome 5 (del(5)(qter----p15.1:). Both mother and son had superficial resemblance to patients with classical Cri-du-Chat Syndrome, but lacked the severe mental and growth retardation generally associated with such cases.

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Motoneuron death in the embryo.

CRC Crit Rev Clin Neurobiol

December 1986

In the developing embryo, 50% or more of the young motoneurons supplying the limb die. Amputation studies suggest that motoneurons depend on acquiring trophic factors from the limb. However, access to the trophic factors is under complex control since all motoneurons, whether destined to live or die, send axons into the limb.

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The chick wrist muscle ulnimetacarpalis dorsalis (umd) has two heads. Using myosin ATPase and acetylcholinesterase (ACh.E) staining it was shown that one of the heads is composed almost entirely of acid-stable muscle fibres with multiple end plates (slow muscle fibres) and the other of acid-labile fibres with single end plates (fast muscle fibres).

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Chick embryo wing buds were transplanted to the pelvic region in place of, or in addition to, the hindlimb bud prior to innervation. The wrist muscle ulnimetacarpalis dorsalis (umd) was innervated by middle-dorsal or middle-ventral motoneurons in the lumbar lateral motor column (LMC) in a rostrocaudal position which varied with the rostrocaudal position of the wing. Despite the heterotopic innervation the subsequent development of the distributions of fast and slow muscle fibres, as judged by ATPase staining, was normal in all muscles examined.

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The literature regarding the application of EMG feedback training in musculoskeletal pain disorders is reviewed. A within-subject control trial of EMG feedback using a counterbalanced design in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain is reported here. Eighteen subjects (12 females and 6 males) were studied in terms of subjective reports of pain and EMG activity measurement under standardised conditions.

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115 patients on haemodialysis and 160 renal transplant patients were examined over an eight year period. A high percentage in both groups were found to have ocular complications. These included disorders of the cornea, lens, retina, choroid, and optic nerve.

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A 5-year-old male with mild mental retardation showed a chromosomal rearrangement involving duplication of part of 2q (2q33.3 leads to 2wter) in 70% of metaphases from peripheral blood; the remaining 30% of cells had a rearrangement of chromosome 2 in the form of a ring, viz., r(2)(2p25.

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The effect of complete and partial limb bud removal on motoneuron survival was studied in Xenopus laevis tadpoles. Amputation of both hind limb buds at stage 49 before limb innervation begins caused the subsequent death of all motoneurons. This result confirms that there are no exceptions to the rule that developing motoneurons must contact the limb to survive.

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Bilateral innervation of a single hindlimb bud was induced by amputating the other limb bud and disrupting the barriers between the two sides. Though the routes of the crossed nerves were necessarily abnormal, the motor projections that developed subsequently were normal as determined by horseradish peroxidase tracing. The limb therefore appears to be innervated selectively, each region being invaded and/or synapsed with only by motoneurones at particular locations.

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A report is given on the numbers of patients seen and treated by Auckland Hospital varicose veins clinic from May 1974 to May 1980. During this time 2145 patients have been seen in the clinic, 351 of these patients have had leg ulcers and 1191 have been treated by minimum operation with or without injection sclerotherapy. Of these 1191 patients, 84 percent have had their operations as outpatients.

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Newly generated motoneurones invading the limb bud were labelled with horseradish peroxidase to identify them later in development. They were then axotomized by amputating the limb bud. The limb bud was replaced immediately in some animals.

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