
|
|
Dictionary » V » Vitreous Vitreousvitreous Glasslike or hyaline, often used alone to designate the vitreous body of the eye (corpus vitreum). ![]()
Please contribute to this project, if you have more information about this term feel free to edit this page ![]()
Results from our forumThe Fiber Disease... an amberlite glow, release-factor hybrids, in layers they grow. Silicon silk weaves a serpentine star, as diatoms dance, fluorescing feldspar. Vitreous veils anneal glycerine glass, as shy cyanide yields a molecular mass. Bituminous blaze effervesces the ebb, while synthetically spinning a ...
See entire post
Floaters... A careful history helps to distinguish retinal detachment from other conditions with similar symptoms. Floaters caused by acute posterior vitreous detachment, especially in the presence of a retinal tear, occur more abruptly and dramatically than do the floaters that people experience ...
See entire post
The Fiber Disease... doctor in tropical disease medicine, could apparently be effective if prescribed in this condition, if there is infection/infestation of the vitreous. Neither Dr Schwartz, nor any other doctor, contradicted this view. You have been told this, and yet, you, Randy, make things up, after being ...
See entire post
How do we see?... decreasing its thickness with reference to the distance of the object to be focused. The region behind the eye lens is filled with a fluid called vitreous humor. As the rays get converged when it passes through the lens the rays focus at the inner layer of the eye ball called retina. The retina ...
See entire post
The Fiber Disease... of amphotericin might be a more suitable choice, because of the protozoal element, and the cases in which there is infection/infestation of the vitreous humor in the eye. This drug is potentially toxic, and any medical practitioner would only consider its use if the benefit of it outweighed ...
See entire post
This page was last modified 21:16, 3 October 2005. This page has been accessed 2,647 times. |
© Biology-Online.org. All Rights Reserved.
Register | Login
| About Us | Contact Us | Link to Us | Disclaimer & Privacy