96 results on '"Langham ME"'
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52. Aqueous humor and control of intra-ocular pressure.
53. Cyclic-AMP and the ocular responses to norepinephrine.
54. On the origin of the ascorbic acid in the aqueous humour of guinea-pigs and rabbits.
55. The alpha and beta adrenergic responses to epinephrine in the rabbit eye.
56. The action of protriptyline on adrenergic mechanisms in rabbit, primate and human eyes.
57. The relationship between pressure and volume changes in living and dead rabbit eyes.
58. The interrelationship of metabolism and deturgescence of the living cornea.
59. The absence of supersensitivity to adrenergic amines in the eye of the conscious rabbit following preganglionic cervical sympathotomy.
60. The effect of aerobic metabolism on the movement of water and sodium in the rabbit cornea.
61. Action of diamox and ammonium chloride on formation of aqueous humour.
62. Horner's syndrome and glaucoma. Report of a case.
63. Pneumatic applanation tonometer studies. II. Rabbit cornea data.
64. Specificity and comparative activity of the carbonic anhydrase inhibitors neptazane and diamox on animal and human eyes.
65. The diagnosis and adrenergic therapy of open-angle glaucoma.
66. A rapid pneumatic applanation tonometer. Comparative findings and evaluation.
67. Quantitative studies of the ocular response to norepinephrine.
68. The role of secretion and pressure-dependent flow in aqueous humor formation.
69. The effect of ascorbic acid transfer on the lactic acid concentration of the aqueous humour after unilateral carotid ligation.
70. Glycolysis in the living and excised cornea of the rabbit.
71. MANOMETRIC STUDIES OF THE PRESSURE-VOLUME RELATIONSHIP IN LIVING AND ENUCLEATED EYES OF INDIVIDUAL HUMAN SUBJECTS.
72. Adrenergic responses in the human eye.
73. Corneal research in Japan.
74. THE DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF GLAUCOMA BASED ON A NEW PROCEDURE FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF INTRAOCULAR DYNAMICS.
75. The effect of carbonic anhydrase inhibitor on the circulation of the aqueous humour.
76. The use of ascorbic to measure the rate of flow plasma through the ciliary processes.
77. Horner's syndrome. Ocular supersensitivity to adrenergic amines.
78. A NEW PROCEDURE FOR THE ANALYSIS OF INTRAOCULAR DYNAMICS IN HUMAN SUBJECTS.
79. Influence of the intra-ocular pressure on the formation of the aqueous humour and the outflow resistance in the living eye.
80. The influence of noninstantaneous mixing on the measurement of fluxes of solute and water across a biological membrane.
81. A fluorophotometer for the study of intra-ocular dynamics in the living animal.
82. Factors affecting the hydration of the cornea in the excised eye and the living animal.
83. New developments in the adrenergic pharmacology of normal and glaucomatous eyes.
84. The transparency of the mammalian cornea.
85. A manometric study of the rate of fall of the intraocular pressure in the living and dead eyes of human subjects.
86. The action of the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor diamox on the formation of the aqueous humour.
87. Circulatory changes associated with onset of primary retinal detachment.
88. The response of the pupil and intraocular pressure of conscious rabbits to adrenergic drugs following unilateral superior cervical ganglionectomy.
89. The effect of ouabain on the hydration and the adenosine triphosphatase activity of the cornea.
90. The action of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors on the intra-ocular pressure.
91. Glaucoma therapy.
92. The Na, K ion dependent adenosinetriphosphatase of the retina and the mechanism of visual loss caused by cardiac glycosides.
93. Influence of an adrenergic potentiator on the ocular response to catecholamines in primates and man.
94. Oxygen supply to rabbit cornea.
95. Factors affecting the concentration of ascorbic acid in the crystalline lens of cattle and rabbits.
96. Steady-state pressure flow relationships in the living and dead eye of the cat.
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