Orbital lesions exhibiting granulomatous inflammation represent a heterogeneous group of diseases characterized by infiltration with epithelioid cells. The authors retrospectively reviewed the orbital computed tomography (CT) scans of 39 patients who had biopsy-proven lesions with granulomatous inflammation and found that diagnosis on the basis of CT was possible in only a few patients, those with a lesion of characteristic location and attenuation (such as a dermoid cyst) or characteristic distribution (such as bilateral enlargement of the lacrimal gland occurring in orbital sarcoidosis). In patients with multicompartmental disease exhibiting bone and extraorbital involvement the site of origin of the mass, the pattern of bone involvement and the clinical findings helped in classifying the cause of the lesion as Wegener's granulomatosis, a foreign body or mucormycosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA reversed-phase ion-pair high-performance liquid chromatographic method has been used for the separation of paracetamol and its four major metabolites (glucuronide, sulphate, cysteine and mercapturate conjugates) in mouse plasma samples. An ODS column was used and the mobile phase consisted of an aqueous solution of 0.01 M tetrabutylammonium chloride and 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrbital lesions characterized by granulomatous inflammation are a heterogeneous group of diseases of various causes with a common histopathological substrate involving aggregates of epithelioid cells. Forty-one patients (27 females and 14 males) with biopsy-proven granulomatous inflammation were seen at an orbital clinic between 1978 and 1989. The mean age at presentation was 40.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHereditary bilateral macular colobomata are not a consequence of an anomalous closure of the fetal fissure. Their extreme rarity, their lack of embryological explanation, and their morphologic similarity to postinflammatory congenital macular scars called the hereditary-malformative etiology of this entity in question. The authors describe a four generation family with seven affected members with isolated autosomal dominant bilateral macular colobomata.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe postnatal development of complex convolutions (CCs) of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) in normal rats has been studied quantitatively with light microscopy. We report that immature neurons do not contain these scarcely understood organelles, since they can be seen for the first time in very few, mature neurons of the 30 day rat; their number constantly increases during the following 4 months. These cytoplasmic inclusions can be equally seen in the aged rat.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLight and electron microscopy were used to investigate the morphology of neuropil and neuronal cell bodies of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) of aged rats. Light microscopic examination reveals that, despite the optic tract showing signs of degeneration, the LGNd is scarcely affected. Thus, a slight but significant reduction in the diameters of both soma and nuclei is observed in aged neurons of the LGNd.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnat Embryol (Berl)
November 1986
Quantitative changes in cell number during development of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus were determined using semithin serial sections of tissue obtained from 28 rats on postnatal day 0, 5, 8, 10, 20, 30, 90 or 165. Our results show three phases of postnatal development in the rat dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus: phase 1 from birth until eye opening, which occurs around the 12th day in these litters; phase 2 from eye opening through stabilization of neuron number on the 30th postnatal day, and phase 3 from that event until adulthood. During the first period increases in neuron number and in glial cell number are found accompanying a nearly seven-fold increase in dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus volume.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe variations, with aging, of both neuronal and glial populations of the rat LGNd have been studied quantitatively. Our results show a stability of the total number of neurons of the rat LGNd with aging; this, plus the constant increase of the rat LGNd volume throughout rat life, causes the neuronal density to decrease slowly. Our data prove the necessity of determining the total number of neurons, not just neuronal density, in order to find out the actual evolution of the neuronal population with aging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo cases of telangiectatic hamartoma of the iris and ciliary body are reported, one of them with its histopathological study. No previous cases have been found, as such, in the current literature. The most important descriptions of primary vascular lesions of the iris and ciliary body are briefly reviewed.
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