In the isolated unfixed vitreous body a structural organization can be visualized by slitlamp microscopy or by an ink-injection technique. We discuss the observations on human and rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) vitreous bodies using the ink-injection technique. Advantages and disadvantages of this method compared with slitlamp microscopy are described. Eventual functional implications of vitreal organization are mentioned briefly.
Co-Cr layers for the perpendicular recording mode were deposited by means of r.f. sputtering under suitable conditions in an argon plasma. The films were characterized structurally by X-ray and electron microscopy and the magnetic properties were determined with a vibrating sample magnetometer and by torque measurements.The influence of some sputter parameters on the structural and magnetic properties are discussed. Even very thin layers show a high h.c.p.[001 ] orientation on several substrates. The in-plane magnetic remanence Sil (= Mr/M~) is very small (about 4~/u). As will be shown in Part II the magnetic anisotropy is caused by crystal anisotropy. The correlation between the h.c.p, c axis orientation and S~l supports this conclusion. The growth mechanism of the layer is discussed.
Cataract lenses from patients of advanced age were processed for SEM by standard pre-fixation followed by treatment by the Tannin-Arginine-Osmium-tetroxide (TAO) method and critical point drying, and for TEM by standard pre-fixation followed by vibratomation, standard post-fixation, ultramicrotome sectioning and staining with uranyl acetate/lead citrate. Secondary cataract material was brought onto a Millipore filter, fixed by standard methods, dried in air and sputter-coated with Au. Both SEM and TEM images revealed degeneration processes in lensfibre material, such as swelling of the lensfibre, protrusion of the cytoplasm, fibrillation of the cell membrane, loss of the nucleus, spherical bodies of various sizes between 0.5-1.5 microns, sometimes surrounded by a (double) membrane with different contrast but without cellular evidence, and small and large vacuoles partly filled with granular material both in and at the periphery of the lensfibre-body. The secondary cataract material on the Millipore filter revealed erythrocytes and more or less spherical bodies with high contrast, measuring between 0.5-1.5 microns, often referred to as Elschnig's pearls, besides non-definable organic material. The SEM and TEM micrographs of the cataract lens material strongly suggest that the spherical bodies with sizes of approximately 0.5-1.5 micrometer and high contrast without cellular evidence, are similar to the more or less spherical bodies found in the secondary cataract material on the filter, referred to as Elschnig's pearls.
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