Easy on the eyes
Article Abstract:
Patients treated with pupil dilation-inducing drugs often complain of blurred vision due to the solutions' long-lasting effect. However, experiments indicate that administering drops containing dapiprazole can lead to significant reductions in the duration of induced pupil dilation.
Publication Name: Reader's Digest (Canadian)
Subject: General interest
ISSN: 0034-0413
Year: 1992
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Identity quest: a pilgrim rejects his official life to regain a private self
Article Abstract:
A man who is seeking to lead a simpler life describes his experiences of returning his driver's license to the Bureau of Motor Vehicles. His feeling of having gained a stronger sense of privacy is detailed.
Publication Name: Utne Reader
Subject: General interest
ISSN: 8750-0256
Year: 2000
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Vision quest
Article Abstract:
The natural healing methods which are available to treat the symptoms associated with sore eyes are presented. The healing properties of Ginkgo, Bilberry and Triphala plants are discussed.
Publication Name: Utne Reader
Subject: General interest
ISSN: 8750-0256
Year: 2000
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Queer eye for the green guy. Supermensch!: the Jewish origins of America's favourite superhero. Queer guy for the 50s guy: the popular fiction of postwar America was-are you ready for this?-gay-friendly
- Abstracts: Tending the regal rose. Taste treats from old-time tomatoes. Long ride to freedom
- Abstracts: Unfit to print: the top 10 censored stories of 1995. The ocean told me to tell you this. Soft news, hard sell: why real stories about regular folks never get told
- Abstracts: Should Congress pass the Violent Crime Control Act of 1991? Making sense of the senseless. Is America safe from crime?
- Abstracts: Bucking biopiracy: what activists are doing stem the tide. One man talking: the world's better off without rare languages