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B. Raymond Fink

Researcher at University of Washington

Publications -  70
Citations -  1626

B. Raymond Fink is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vagus nerve & Axoplasmic transport. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 70 publications receiving 1604 citations.

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Dynamics of colchicine effects on rapid axonal transport and axonal morphology.

TL;DR: Conduction of the compound action potential was essentially unimpaired in all experiments, which contrasts with the effect of lidocaine, which blocks conduction as well as rapid transport reversibly and blocks rapid transport prior to affecting microtubule structure.
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Effects of lidocaine on axonal morphology, microtubules, and rapid transport in rabbit vagus nerve in vitro.

TL;DR: Treatment with lidocaine, at exposures which completely block impulse conduction and rapid axonal transport, resulted in a sequence of morphological effects on rabbit vagus never in vitro, and there was good recovery of nerve exposures.
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Lidocaine Inhibition of Rapid Axonal Transport

TL;DR: The study shows that the rabbit vagus nerve, after labeling of its efferent nuclei by intracerebral injection of tritiated leucine, behaves in vitro as it does in vitro with regard to rapid axoplasmic transport.
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Mechanisms of Differential Axial Blockade in Epidural and Subarachnoid Anesthesia

TL;DR: The mechanisms of persistent differential blocks that accompany subarachnoid and epidural anesthesia are clarified here with the aid of two principles derived from in vitro study of individual myelinated axons: conduction can leap two consecutive blocked nodes but not three, and a fiber length with more than three consecutive nodes bathed by weak anesthetic may block by decremental conduction.