Literature DB >> 12897575

Long-term effect of retinal ganglion cell axotomy on the histomorphometry of other cells in the porcine retina.

András M Komáromy1, Dennis E Brooks, Maria E Källberg, William W Dawson, Agoston Szél, Akos Lukáts, Don A Samuelson, Harold L Sapp, Kirk N Gelatt, Mark B Sherwood.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine the effect of retinal ganglion cell axotomy on the thickness of inner plexiform, inner nuclear, and outer plexiform layers, as well as the densities of short- and middle-to-long-wavelength cones, in the porcine retina.
METHODS: Unilateral retinal ganglion cell axotomy was performed in seven domestic pigs by either surgical optic nerve section or peripapillary argon laser photocoagulation. Damage to the retinal vasculature was ruled out with fluorescein angiography. Histologic examination of the retinal tissue was performed nine months later. Cone densities were determined immunohistochemically with the anti-visual pigment antibodies COS-1 and OS-2. Image analysis of semithin retinal cross sections was used to measure the thickness of the retinal layers. The effect of axotomy was quantified by optic nerve axon counts and estimations of retinal ganglion cell counts. The data were compared between the eyes with axotomy and the contralateral normal eye using the nonparametric Wilcoxon rank sum test.
RESULTS: Treatment of the peripapillary retina with the argon laser resulted in a median decrease in axon counts and retinal ganglion cell density estimates of 31%. No optic nerve axons and cells resembling retinal ganglion cells were found in the eyes with transected optic nerves. There was no significant difference in either the thickness of any retinal layers or cone densities between axotomized and normal control eyes.
CONCLUSION: No signs of retrograde transsynaptic degeneration were observed in porcine retinas nine months after retinal ganglion cell axotomy.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12897575     DOI: 10.1097/00061198-200308000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Glaucoma        ISSN: 1057-0829            Impact factor:   2.503


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