Literature DB >> 6972859

[Electron microscopical and chemical investigations of the pathological changes of the vitreous body].

U M Klemen.   

Abstract

By means of vitrectomy in vivo investigations of the pathologic changes of the vitreous body including histology and chemical analysis have become feasible. The electron microscopical examinations of the tissue particles gained by means of vitrectomy displayed collagen fibrils which were partly irregular, most of the mesh-work being split up. The periodicity of these fibrils was about 64 nm, similar changes had been observed in human vitreous following perforating injuries, as well as in rabbit vitreous after blood injections. All typical stages of the lysis of red cells and their phagocytosis by large macrophages could be demonstrated. In order to get an accurate chemical analysis of the material resulting from vitrectomy it was first to all necessary to find out a method which enabled us to compare the concentrations of different chemical substances in the material gained by vitrectomy with the content of these substances in the whole vitreous body. Of 16 pairs of human post mortem eyes, enucleated between 3 and 5 hours after death, one eye was submitted to vitrectomy under constant suction- and infusion-pressure and cutting rate, the duration of surgery being different (3-9 min.); in each fellow-eye the whole vitreous body was removed. The comparison of the different concentrations of chemical substances showed a typical correlation. This method was performed in 13 clinical cases suffering from different kinds of vitreal changes. The concentration of protein was found to have increased in cases suffering from intravitreal hemorrhages, in cases suffering from shrinkage of the vitreous body after spontaneous complete resorption of intravitreal bleedings and in one case suffering from intravitreal membranes after endophthalmitis; in cases suffering from subvitreal bleedings the protein content of the vitreous body was approximately normal. The pathology leakage of the retinal vessels as it can be found in cases suffering from proliferative diabetic retinopathy caused no significant increase of the intravitreal protein concentration. The concentrations of lactic acid and glycogen were examined in order to find out if anaerobic glycolysis could be proved in the vitreous body of eyes suffering from ischaemic retinopathy. Only one case showed an increased concentration of lactic acid, in 3 cases there was a reduced content of glycogen. In these 3 cases the possibility of the existence of anaerobic glycolysis could be excluded, because in rabbits a rapid excretion rate of exceeding concentrations of lactic acid via retinal vessels had been found.

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Year:  1981        PMID: 6972859     DOI: 10.1007/BF00140883

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Doc Ophthalmol        ISSN: 0012-4486            Impact factor:   2.379


  26 in total

1.  THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF THE HUMAN VITREOUS BODY AS RELATED TO AGE AND MYOPIA.

Authors:  E R BERMAN; I C MICHAELSON
Journal:  Exp Eye Res       Date:  1964-03       Impact factor: 3.467

2.  Steady state distribution of free amino acids in the aqueous humours, vitreous body and plasma of the rabbit.

Authors:  D V REDDY; C ROSENBERG; V E KINSEY
Journal:  Exp Eye Res       Date:  1961-12       Impact factor: 3.467

3.  [Histological observations on the behavior of the vitroretinal limiting layer in detachment of the vitreous body].

Authors:  J GARTNER
Journal:  Klin Monbl Augenheilkd       Date:  1963-06       Impact factor: 0.700

4.  Studies on the structure of the vitreous body. V. Soluble protein content.

Authors:  E A BALAZS; L SUNBLAD
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1960-07       Impact factor: 5.157

5.  Protein dynamics in the eye studied with labelled proteins.

Authors:  D M MAURICE
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  1959-01       Impact factor: 5.258

6.  Studies on the structure of the vitreous body. VIII. Comparative biochemistry.

Authors:  E A BALAZS; T C LAURENT; U B LAURENT; M H DEROCHE; D M BUNNEY
Journal:  Arch Biochem Biophys       Date:  1959-04       Impact factor: 4.013

7.  Residual proteins of the vitreous.

Authors:  W K MCEWEN; A A SURAN
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  1956-10       Impact factor: 5.258

8.  [Further observations on the content of pyruvic and lactic acid in the vitreous humor].

Authors:  M DE VINCENTIIS
Journal:  Boll Soc Ital Biol Sper       Date:  1951-03

9.  [Lactic acid content of the vitreous body of the rabbit eye during and after pressure ischemia].

Authors:  H Weiss; B Kosmath
Journal:  Albrecht Von Graefes Arch Klin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  1973

10.  Vitreous contraction in proliferative diabetic retinopathy.

Authors:  M D Davis
Journal:  Arch Ophthalmol       Date:  1965-12
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  1 in total

1.  Diabetes-induced oxidative stress in the vitreous humor.

Authors:  Zsuzsanna Géhl; Edina Bakondi; Miklós D Resch; Csaba Hegedűs; Katalin Kovács; Petra Lakatos; Antal Szabó; Zoltán Nagy; László Virág
Journal:  Redox Biol       Date:  2016-07-08       Impact factor: 11.799

  1 in total

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