Abstract
SINCE a study1 of the changes produced by cortisone in the decolorization times of oxidation-reduction dyes injected in the skin gave some grounds for believing that this drug caused a change in the electrode potential (Eh) of the tissues, it seemed desirable to test the hypothesis by direct electrical measurement. The results show that a change in potential does occur, and the method employed offers a simple clinical means of investigating the peripheral action of cortisone and other substances.
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Loxton, G. E., and Le Vay, D. (in the press).
Long, D. A., Miles, A. A., and Perry, W. L. M., Lancet, i, 1085 (1951).
Stewart, C. P., Horn, D., and Robson, J. S., Biochem. J. (in the press).
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LOXTON, G., LE VAY, D. Effect of Cortisone on Tissue Potentials in Man. Nature 171, 524 (1953). https://doi.org/10.1038/171524a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/171524a0
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