Literature DB >> 15380623

Methamphetamine exacerbates the toxic effect of kainic acid in the adult rat retina.

L G Rodrigues1, M A Tavares, J P M Wood, K-G Schmidt, N N Osborne.   

Abstract

The recreational use of the psychoactive drug, methamphetamine has increased markedly over the last three decades. It has long been known that this drug has detrimental effects upon the mammalian brain monoaminergic system, but the long- or short-term effects on the retina, a neurological extension of the central nervous system, have received little attention. The aim of this study was, therefore, to determine whether intraocular injection of methamphetamine (MA) is toxic to the healthy adult rat retina and to analyse its effects on the compromised retina after an injection of the ionotropic glutamate receptor agonist, kainate, which is known to cause retinal neuropathology. The equivalent of 1 mM (in the vitreous humour) MA and/or kainate (40 microM) were injected intravitreally. Flash electroretinograms (ERGs) were recorded before and 2 and 4 days after treatment. Five days after treatment, animals were killed and the retinas analysed either for the immunohistochemical localisation of various antigens or for electrophoresis/Western blotting. Some animals were kept for 19 days after treatment and the retinas analysed for tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity. No differences could be found between vehicle- and MA-treated retinas with respect to the nature or localisation of either tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity after 5 or 19 days or other antigens after 5 days. Moreover, the normal ERG and GFAP and calretinin protein antigens were unaffected by MA. Kainate treatment, however, caused a change in the ERGs after 2 and 4 days, an alteration in every antigen localised by immunohistochemistry and an increase in the retinal levels of calretinin and GFAP proteins. Significantly, the changes seen in the b-wave amplitude and implicit time of the ERG after 4 days and the increased level of GFAP protein after 5 days following kainate treatment were enhanced when MA was co-injected. Intravitreal injection of methamphetamine had no detectable detrimental effect on the normal adult rat retina but exacerbated the damaging effects of kainic acid. Such data suggest that a neurotoxic effect of MA may be more obviously illustrated when the tissue is already compromised as occurs in, for example, ischemia.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15380623     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuint.2004.06.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurochem Int        ISSN: 0197-0186            Impact factor:   3.921


  3 in total

1.  Toxic effect of methamphetamine on the retina of CD1 mice.

Authors:  Hong Lai; Huiyang Zeng; Cheng Zhang; Lin Wang; Mark O M Tso; Shenghan Lai
Journal:  Curr Eye Res       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 2.424

Review 2.  Ocular manifestations of crystal methamphetamine use.

Authors:  Ribhi Hazin; Jean Lud Cadet; Malik Y Kahook; Dunia Saed
Journal:  Neurotox Res       Date:  2009-02-28       Impact factor: 3.911

3.  Acute changes in the retina and central retinal artery with methamphetamine.

Authors:  Minsup Lee; Wendy Leskova; Randa S Eshaq; Norman R Harris
Journal:  Exp Eye Res       Date:  2020-02-07       Impact factor: 3.467

  3 in total

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