46 research outputs found
Individual Investors and Portfolio Diversification in Late Victorian Britain: How Diversified Were Victorian Financial Portfolios?
This article investigates Victorian investor financial portfolio strategies in England and Wales during the second half of the nineteenth century. We find that investors held on average about half of their gross wealth in the form of four or five liquid financial securities, but were reluctant to adopt fully contemporary financial advice to invest equal amounts in securities or to spread risk across the globe. They generally held under-diversified portfolios and proximity to their investments may have been an alternative to diversification as a means of risk reduction, especially for the less wealthy
Trois cas de lichen nitidus chez des patients de race noire
Report of 3 cases of lichen nitidus in black people. The last publications and our observations allow us to confirm that this affection occurs as frequently in white as in black people but is recognised more easily in black people in whom it takes a characteristic depigmented aspect. The relationship between lichen nitidus and lichen planus is briefly discussed.</jats:p
Dermatosis of Hairless Rats Fed a Hypomagnesic Diet – Pathology and Immunology
The histopathology of hypomagnesic dermatosis in the hairless rat was studied on semithin sections, by electron microscopy, direct immunofluorescence and monoclonal antibodies to T cell subsets. We found primarily an edema of the epidermis and of the superficial dermis with a moderate mononuclear infiltrate and sometimes intraepidermal splits. The immunofluorescent study did not reveal any significant immune reactant within the skin. The comparison of our findings with the histopathology of the atopic dermatitis did not allow us to propose the hypomagnesic dermatosis as an animal model for human atopic dermatitis. We discuss some aspects of the pathogenesis of this chronic inflammatory dermatosis.</jats:p
A Human Monoclonal Antibody Reacting with Merkel Cells: Immunofluorescence, Immunoperoxidase, and Immunoelectron Microscopy
A human monoclonal, mu, kappa, cold agglutinin antibody of the rare specificity Pr h (serum and proper eluates) was used in immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase techniques and in immunoelectron microscopy on rabbit lip specimens. Pr h antibody strongly reacted with scattered cells in epidermis, which were demonstrated to be Merkel cells by electron microscopy; no nerve fibers were stained. In immunoelectron microscopy (IEM), a strong reaction was seen within the cytoplasm and around the granules. This is the first IEM staining of Merkel cells (MC) so far reported; it demonstrates the expression of a carbohydrate differentiation antigen in MC. The availability of a potent monoclonal antibody reacting with MC but not with neighboring epidermal cells in rabbit lip offers a new tool for the study of several aspects of MC biology, including antigenic properties and kinetics
