Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs

Lesions of cerebrocortical necrosis experimentally induced in pigs by transcalvarial freezing with liquid nitrogen were slightly fluorescent 48 hours after surgery. Fluorescence increased greatly thereafter and was most marked grossly under ultraviolet illumination with a wavelength of 366 nm at 7 d...

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Main Authors: Lee, J. Y., Little, P. B.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sage Publications 1980
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/39546/1/Studies%20of%20autofluorescence%20in%20experimentally%20induced%20cerebral%20necrosis%20in%20pigs.pdf
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author Lee, J. Y.
Little, P. B.
author_facet Lee, J. Y.
Little, P. B.
author_sort Lee, J. Y.
collection UPM
description Lesions of cerebrocortical necrosis experimentally induced in pigs by transcalvarial freezing with liquid nitrogen were slightly fluorescent 48 hours after surgery. Fluorescence increased greatly thereafter and was most marked grossly under ultraviolet illumination with a wavelength of 366 nm at 7 days. Fluorescence of the necrotic focus persisted up to 35 days after surgery. Detection of cerebrocortical necrosis by ultraviolet illumination of fresh specimens during gross inspection is useful in determining the extent and distribution of lesions. This would aid more accurate selection of brain sections for histological examination in various encephalopathies.
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spelling upm.eprints-395462015-08-10T04:24:04Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/39546/ Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs Lee, J. Y. Little, P. B. Lesions of cerebrocortical necrosis experimentally induced in pigs by transcalvarial freezing with liquid nitrogen were slightly fluorescent 48 hours after surgery. Fluorescence increased greatly thereafter and was most marked grossly under ultraviolet illumination with a wavelength of 366 nm at 7 days. Fluorescence of the necrotic focus persisted up to 35 days after surgery. Detection of cerebrocortical necrosis by ultraviolet illumination of fresh specimens during gross inspection is useful in determining the extent and distribution of lesions. This would aid more accurate selection of brain sections for histological examination in various encephalopathies. Sage Publications 1980-04 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/39546/1/Studies%20of%20autofluorescence%20in%20experimentally%20induced%20cerebral%20necrosis%20in%20pigs.pdf Lee, J. Y. and Little, P. B. (1980) Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs. Veterinary Pathology, 17 (2). pp. 226-233. ISSN 0300-9858
spellingShingle Lee, J. Y.
Little, P. B.
Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs
title Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs
title_full Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs
title_fullStr Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs
title_full_unstemmed Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs
title_short Studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs
title_sort studies of autofluorescence in experimentally induced cerebral necrosis in pigs
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/39546/1/Studies%20of%20autofluorescence%20in%20experimentally%20induced%20cerebral%20necrosis%20in%20pigs.pdf
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