Publications by authors named "Weinhaus R"

Recent anatomic work has shown that the capillary network of the fovea is multilaminar. We have identified the elements of this network that are visualized by fluorescein angiography and those that are missed. Fluorescein angiograms of monkey retinas (Macaca fascicularis) with good visualization of individual capillaries were obtained by standard clinical techniques.

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The relationship of the vasculature to the neuronal layers was studied in whole-mounts and in sections of macaque retinas. Like other central nervous structures, primate retinas have local variations in vascularity that reflect local variations in metabolism, rather than simply tissue thickness or volume. A special feature of the retina is a dense vascular plexus in the nerve fiber layer, which is unmyelinated and hence must generate a substantial metabolic demand for ion pumping.

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The retinal vasculature of the fovea of squirrel monkeys was studied in retinal whole mounts and in sections of the same retinas. At the center of the fovea there is an approximately circular avascular zone surrounded by a set of terminal capillaries in the inner nuclear layer. Within the foveal depression, four capillary planes that bear a precise relationship to the neuronal organization appear in a specific sequence with increasing eccentricity.

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We reviewed 242 cases of choroidal and ciliary body melanoma that were treated by enucleation to determine the importance of juxtapapillary location as a prognostic factor for tumor-related deaths. Analysis involved Kaplan-Meier survival curves and Cox proportional hazards analysis. Patients with juxtapapillary tumors had a worse prognosis than those with tumors in other locations (64% vs 78% five-year survival), but the difference was not statistically significant.

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Attempts were made to correlate angular position of the elbow with integrated electromyographic activity of biceps and triceps. Five conditions were studied: isometric co-contraction and immediately after fast flexion, slow flexion, fast extension and slow extension movements. Neither activity of biceps, activity of triceps or the ratio of activities correlated with any of four different angles for these five conditions.

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