SummaryElectrophysiological monitoring of selected neural pathways of the brain, brainstem, spinal cord and peripheral nervous system has become mandatory in some surgery of the nervous system where preventable neural injury can occur. Evoked potentials are relatively simple methods of testing the integrity of various aspects of the nervous system. This review covers the variety of evoked potentials that can be monitored and outlines the principles of their measurement. Their use in specific situations and how factors such as anaesthesia might affect them is presented.
Putranjiva roxburghii (PR) pollen has been found to be an important aeroallergen for type I hypersensitivity. In the present study, the IgE binding proteins of PR pollen have been characterized and compared with pollen allergens of Ricinus communis (RC) belonging to family Euphorbiaceae. On isoelectric focusing, PR pollen extract resolved into 35 bands (pI 3–9), whereas SDS-PAGE separated it into 18 protein components (MW 14–100 kD). Pooled patient’s sera (ID +ve to PR) recognized 12 allergenic proteins in Putranjiva and five of them (MWs 92, 80, 55,43 and 30 kD) showed immunologic reactivity to most of the sera samples tested individually by immunoblot. A number of shared allergenic proteins (MWs 92, 80, 66, 50, 43 and 14 kD) were observed between PR and RC pollen extracts on immunoblot using Putranjiva allergic serum pool. Inhibition in the binding for most of PR pollen allergenic proteins was obtained with higher concentration of RC extract than PR itself, depicting the presence of cross-reacting allergens in both. Putranjiva pollen extract was fractionated by a combination of DEAE Sephadex-A 50 and Sephadex-G 200 column chromatography. Periodate deglycosylation of western blotted PR extract and Put I fraction indicated the involvement of carbohydrate moieties in the allergenic activity. Of the two fractions from Put I (la and lb), Put lb was found to be the most allergenic protein by ELISA inhibition. Dot blot analysis with individual patients sera identified it as a major allergen of PR.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.