Literature DB >> 19141144

Recent clinical findings with memantine should not mean that the idea of neuroprotection in glaucoma is abandoned.

Neville N Osborne1.   

Abstract

Loss of vision in primary open-angle glaucoma (glaucoma) is caused by retinal ganglion cells dying at a seemingly steady and variable rate in different patients. Present treatments for all glaucoma patients are inadequate and a goal to rectify this is to discover appropriate drugs or chemicals (neuroprotectants) that can be taken orally to slow down retinal ganglion cell death and have negligible side-effects. It was therefore of great disappointment to learn earlier this year that the one clinical trial conducted to test the efficacy of memantine as a neuroprotectant for glaucoma was unsuccessful. In this article, I consider the mechanisms by which retinal ganglion cells may die in glaucoma and suggest that memantine may have benefited patients taking it but to a level that was difficult to detect with present methodologies. Ganglion cells are induced to die by different triggers in glaucoma, suggesting that neuroprotectants with multiple modes of actions are likely to reveal clearer results than was found for memantine. Therefore, the idea of neuroprotection in glaucoma must not be abandoned.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19141144     DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-3768.2008.01459.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1755-375X            Impact factor:   3.761


  43 in total

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2.  Evaluation of corpus geniculatum laterale and vitreous fluid by magnetic resonance spectroscopy in patients with glaucoma; a preliminary study.

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3.  Effect of the Aβ aggregation modulator MRZ-99030 on retinal damage in an animal model of glaucoma.

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Review 5.  Pharmacotherapy of glaucoma.

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6.  Deletion of thioredoxin-interacting protein preserves retinal neuronal function by preventing inflammation and vascular injury.

Authors:  M F El-Azab; B R B Baldowski; B A Mysona; A Y Shanab; I N Mohamed; M A Abdelsaid; S Matragoon; K E Bollinger; A Saul; A B El-Remessy
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Review 7.  Neuroprotection for treatment of glaucoma in adults.

Authors:  Dayse F Sena; Kristina Lindsley
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2013-02-28

8.  NLRP3 inflammasome in NMDA-induced retinal excitotoxicity.

Authors:  Pavlina Tsoka; Paulo R Barbisan; Keiko Kataoka; Xiaohong Nancy Chen; Bo Tian; Peggy Bouzika; Joan W Miller; Eleftherios I Paschalis; Demetrios G Vavvas
Journal:  Exp Eye Res       Date:  2019-01-29       Impact factor: 3.467

9.  Neuroprotective effects of bis(7)-tacrine against glutamate-induced retinal ganglion cells damage.

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Review 10.  Molecular complexity of primary open angle glaucoma: current concepts.

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