(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2001;42:1038-1044.)
© 2001
by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Ocular Blood Flow and Retinal Metabolism in Abyssinian Cats with Hereditary Retinal Degeneration
Siv F. E. Nilsson1,
Olav Mäepea2,
Albert Alm2 and
Kristina Narfström3
1 From the Departments of Physiology and
2 Neuroscience, Ophthalmology Division, University of Uppsala; and
3 Department of Medicine and Surgery, Swedish University of Agricultural Science, Uppsala, Sweden.
 |
Abstract
|
|---|
PURPOSE. To investigate if retinal blood flow decreases with progression of the
disease in Abyssinian cats with progressive retinal atrophy (PRA), to
examine if the choroidal blood flow was affected by the disease, and to
determine the uptake of glucose and formation of lactate in the outer
retina.
METHODS. Local blood flow in different parts of the eye was determined with
radioactive microspheres, in 9 normal cats and in 10 cats at different
stages of PRA. Three blood flow determinations were made in each
animal, during control conditions, after IV administration of
indomethacin and after subsequent administration of
N
-nitro-L-arginine (L-NA).
Blood samples from a choroidal vein and a femoral artery were collected
to determine the retinal formation of lactate and uptake of glucose.
RESULTS. In Abyssinian cats with PRA (n = 10), the retinal
blood flow was significantly (P
0.01) lower than
in normal cats (n = 9) during control conditions,
6.4 ± 1.7 compared with 14.1 ± 1.9 g
min-1 (100 g)-1. The vascular resistance in
the iris and ciliary body was significantly higher in the cats at a
late stage of PRA, both compared with normal cats and to cats at an
early stage of the disease, whereas the choroidal vascular resistance
was not significantly affected. Indomethacin had no effect on ocular
blood flows in normal cats, but in cats with PRA, iridal blood flow was
more than doubled after indomethacin. The retinal formation of lactate
was significantly (P
0.001) lower in cats with
PRA than in normal cats, 0.111 ± 0.035 (n =
8) compared with 0.318 ± 0.024 (n = 8) µmol
min-1. The uptake of glucose was not significantly
different in cats with PRA.
CONCLUSIONS. Retinal blood flow is severely decreased in Abyssinian cats at a late
stage of retinal degeneration, whereas the choroidal microcirculation
is not significantly affected by the disease. At a late stage of
retinal degeneration, vascular resistance in the iris is significantly
increased, which at least in part could be caused by cyxlooxygenase
products.
 |
Introduction
|
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The recessively inherited progressive rod/cone
degeneration, also called progressive retinal atrophy (PRA), observed
in Abyssinian cats has clinical features that greatly resemble those
found in patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP). The disease is slow
in onset; usually no changes are observed by ophthalmoscopic
examination until the age of 1.5 to 2 years.1
However,
affected kittens can be disclosed by electroretinography at a much
earlier stage.2
The degeneration starts in the peripheral
and midperipheral retina and affects initially only the rods, but with
progression of the disease, the degeneration spreads centrally and
affects cones as well. At an advanced stage of the disease the rods and
cones are lost, and the outer plexiform layer is reduced in thickness,
whereas the inner retina has an almost normal
appearance.1
3
In Abyssinian cats with PRA, as well as in RP patients, the retinal
blood vessels become attenuated with progression of the
disease,1
indicating decreased retinal blood flow. This
effect could be secondary to the degeneration of the photoreceptors,
due to the reduced metabolic demand of the retina. However, the retinal
blood vessels supply the inner retina,4
which seems to be
almost unaffected by the retinal atrophy in the Abyssinian
cat,1
3
whereas the photoreceptors and the outer layers of
the retina are supplied with oxygen and nutrients by diffusion from the
choroidal microcirculation.4
The retinal and choroidal
microcirculation have very different characteristics. Retinal blood
flow is low and autoregulated, with a high extraction of oxygen and
nutrients, whereas choroidal blood flow is high and without
autoregulation, with a low extraction of nutrients.4
The
significance of the high choroidal blood flow is not clear; is it
necessary to regulate the temperature in the retina or is it due to the
metabolic demands of the outer retina? In the former case, one would
expect choroidal blood flow to be unaffected in Abyssinian cats with
PRA.
Unlike most other tissues, the retina produces large amounts of lactate
even under hyperoxic conditions. A recent study has shown that in the
outer retina most of the glucose is metabolized to lactate by the way
of aerobic glycolysis, whereas the inner retina uses mainly glucose
oxidation for energy production.5
In vitro, the outer
segments of photoreceptors6
7
8
as well as the Müller
cells,9
and the retinal pigmented epithelial
cells10
11
have been shown to produce lactate, but the
major source of retinal lactate production is not known.
The aim of the present study was to investigate if retinal blood flow
decreased with the progression of the disease in Abyssinian cats with
PRA and to examine if choroidal blood flow was affected by the disease.
Furthermore, we examined if the uptake of glucose and formation of
lactate in the outer retina was affected in the Abyssinian cats with
PRA.
 |
Materials and Methods
|
|---|
Local blood flow in different parts of the eye was determined
with radioactive microspheres in 10 cats at different stages of PRA, 9
Abyssinian and 1 Abyssinian/mixed breed. Nine normal cats, eight mixed
breed (European) and one Abyssinian, of comparable ages served as
control group (Table 1)
. All cats with PRA and most of the normal cats were bred at
the Department of Medicine and Surgery, Swedish University of
Agricultural Science (Uppsala, Sweden) and were kept there until the
day of the experiment. Four normal cats, which were obtained from a
licensed breeder, were kept at the animal department at the Biomedical
Center (University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden) for 2 weeks before the
experiments. The experiments were approved by the local ethics
committee in Uppsala and adhered to the ARVO Statement for the Use of
Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision Research.
Clinical Examination and Classification into Disease Stages
Within a month before the blood flow determination, the cats
with PRA were examined by ophthalmoscopy and classified into disease
stages (S1S4) as previously described in detail1
(for a
brief description see Table 2
). In addition, two cats, homozygous for the recessively inherited
disease and therefore known to be affected but yet not showing any
clinical symptoms of PRA (S0), were included in the study (Table 1)
.
Anesthesia and General Surgical Procedures
Induction of anesthesia was achieved by IM injection of a
mixture (1:1) of ketamine (Ketalar, 50 mg ml-1;
Parker-Davis, Morris Plains, NJ) and xylazine (Rompun, 20 mg
ml-1; Bayer AG, Leverkusen, Germany),
approximately 0.3 ml (kg body wt)-1. The
induction of anesthesia was made in the research animal quarters,
usually by the animal technician. The cat was then placed in a cage,
wrapped in a blanket, and transported to the laboratory (Department of
Physiology, University of Uppsala), where it immediately was placed on
a servo-controlled heating pad. A femoral vein was cannulated with
polyethylene tubing and
-chloralose, 75 mg (kg body
wt)-1, was slowly given IV. A tracheotomy was
made, to insert a tracheal cannula, and the other femoral vein and both
femoral arteries were cannulated with polyethylene tubings. For the
injection of microspheres, the right brachial artery was cannulated by
a catheter, which was advanced into the left heart ventricle by
monitoring the pulse pressure curve. The cat was then placed prone, and
one femoral artery was connected to a pressure transducer for
continuous recording of the arterial blood pressure on a chart recorder
(SE 460; ABB Goerz Instruments, Vienna, Austria). The other femoral
artery was used for blood sampling during the experiment. One femoral
vein was used for continuous infusion of a sodium bicarbonate solution
(5%;
10 µl kg-1
min-1). The other femoral vein was used for
infusion of drugs during the experiment. The tracheal cannula was
connected to a Palmer pump for artificial ventilation. Arterial blood
samples were collected during the preparation as well as during the
experiment to determine the arterial pH,
PCO2, and
PO2. The samples were analyzed in an
ABL 300 (Radiometer, Copenhagen, Denmark), and the values were adjusted
to normal by changing the ventilation and/or IV administration of
sodium bicarbonate.
In most experiments, a choroidal vein was cannulated for collection of
venous blood for determination of blood glucose and lactate. Therefore,
during the initial surgical procedures, an incision was made in the
upper eyelid of the left eye, at the one oclock position, and parts
of the conjunctiva and extraocular muscles were removed to expose the
intrascleral venous plexus and a choroidal vein. The wound was then
closed by a clamp until the vein was to be cannulated.
Experimental Protocols
Before the start of the experiment, heparin (KabiVitrum,
Stockholm, Sweden), 500 IU/kg body wt, was given IV. Three blood flow
determinations were made in each animal, during control conditions,
after IV administration of indomethacin, 5 mg
kg-1, and after IV administration of
N
-nitro-L-arginine
(L-NA), 20 mg kg-1, an inhibitor of nitric oxide
synthase. Indomethacin was given to simplify the subsequent cannulation
and collection of venous blood samples from the choroidal vein, because
without indomethacin, the tip of the cannula is often clogged. Because
nitric oxide seems to contribute to the normal vascular tone in both
the retinal12
and the uveal
microcirculation12
13
14
15
of the cat, we wanted to examine if
the response to L-NA was different in cats with PRA.
Before each blood flow measurement, the heart rate was determined by
running the recorder at a high chart speed, which made it possible to
see each pulse pressure wave. After each blood flow measurement, an
arterial blood sample was collected for determination of the arterial
pH, PO2, and
PCO2.
After the first blood flow determination, indomethacin was given as
soon as possible and 20 minutes later, the choroidal vein was
cannulated by a tapered polyethylene tubing. Venous blood was then
collected by free flow into a plastic tube, and simultaneously arterial
blood was sampled from a femoral artery. The arterial and venous blood
samples were immediately frozen, by placing the tubes in a mixture of
ethanol and dry ice. The second blood flow measurement was then made,
and after this a slow infusion of L-NA was started. L-NA was given
during 10 minutes, and 30 minutes later, arterial and venous blood
samples for determination of glucose and lactate were collected. The
third blood flow determination was then made and immediately afterward,
the animal was killed by intracardiac injection of a potassium chloride
solution.
In most experiments, the left eye was immediately enucleated and
sectioned along ora serrata, and the anterior and posterior segments
were the placed in fixative, to be used for electron microscopy or
immunohistochemistry. The morphology and immunohistochemical data will
be presented elsewhere. The right eye was dissected into iris, ciliary
body, choroid, and retina, to determine local blood flows in the eye.
Determination of Regional Blood Flows with Radioactive Microspheres
Regional blood flows were determined using radioactive
microspheres (15.5 ± 0.1 µm), according to the reference flow
method, described in detail elsewhere.16
17
18
Microspheres
labeled with three different radionuclides,
141Ce, 113Sn, and
103Ru (NEN, Boston, MA), were used, allowing
three blood flow determinations in each animal. The microspheres,
1 x 106 to 2 x
106 per injection, were injected into the left
heart ventricle over 15 to 20 seconds, and simultaneously, reference
samples were collected from a femoral artery, by free flow into
preweighed plastic tubes over a 1-minute period (10 seconds per tube).
After the experiment, the chest wall was opened to verify the proper
location of the intracardiac catheter, and tissue samples were
collected from the heart muscle and the lung, in addition to the
samples from the eye. The tissues samples were placed into preweighed
plastic tubes, and together with the reference blood samples were then
weighed and counted in a three-channel
-spectrometer. Regional blood
flows and cardiac output (CO) were then calculated as previously
described.19
The blood flow values for the intraocular
tissues are best expressed as total flow in the tissue, as it may be
difficult during dissection to completely remove the vitreous from the
retinal preparation, which may cause large variability in the blood
flow values, if expressed as flow per gram wet tissue weight. However,
while analyzing the data, we observed that the weight of the iris was
significantly lower in the cats with PRA and the weight of the retina
appeared to be lower as well, although not statistically significant
(Table 3)
. Thus, blood flow values were expressed in grams per minute per
100 g tissue. Furthermore, vascular resistance was calculated as
MABP divided by the flow, because the arterial blood pressure tended to
be slightly higher in the cats with PRA (see Table 4
).
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Table 4. MABP, HR, CO, TPR, and Arterial pH, PCO2, and
PO2 during the Three Blood Flow
Determinations, in Normal Cats and in Abyssinian Cats with PRA
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Determination of Glucose Uptake and Lactate Formation in the Outer
Retina
After the experiment, the venous and arterial blood samples were
thawed, and their concentrations of glucose and lactate were determined
by a dual analyzer (Model 2700; YSI, Yellow Springs, OH). Each sample
was analyzed at least twice, and the mean value of these determinations
was used in the calculations. Glucose uptake and lactate formation was
calculated as their arterio-venous differences multiplied by the
choroidal blood flow in the right eye (data obtained with the
microspheres). In one experiment, the cannulation of the choroidal vein
failed completely, and in two experiments, choroidal blood flow was too
low after L-NA to obtain blood samples for the analysis of glucose and
lactate.
Drugs
Indomethacin and L-NA were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co.
(St. Louis, MO). Indomethacin was dissolved in
5 ml PBS, to which 3
drops of 2 M NaOH was added immediately before use, and L-NA was
dissolved in saline (6 mg/ml) with 2 M NaOH added (
1 drop/2 ml) to
result in a pH of
9.
Statistical Analysis
Students t-test for unpaired data (two-tailed) was
used when the cats with PRA were compared with normal cats. One-way
ANOVA was used to compare the vascular resistance in normal cats
(n = 9) with the vascular resistance in cats at an
early (S0S2; n = 4) and a late stage (S3S4;
n = 6) of retinal degeneration. Repeated-measures ANOVA
was used when the blood flow after indomethacin and L-NA was compared
with blood flow during control conditions, within the different groups.
Tukeys test was used as post-ANOVA test in both cases.
P < 0.05 was considered significant. All values are
given as the mean ± SEM. Linear regression analysis was used to
determine whether blood flow, formation of lactate, or uptake of
glucose was significantly correlated with age (progression of disease).
 |
Results
|
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MABP, HR, CO, TPR, and Arterial
pH, PCO2, and PO2
There was no significant difference in mean arterial blood
pressure (MABP), heart rate (HR), cardiac output (CO), total peripheral
resistance (TPR), or arterial pH,
PCO2 and
PO2 between the normal cats and the
cats with PRA during control conditions (Table 4)
. Indomethacin had no
effect on these parameters, except the arterial
PO2, which was slightly reduced in
both groups (Table 4)
. In Abyssinian cats with PRA as well as in normal
cats, L-NA caused the expected increase in MABP,13
15
concomitant with a decrease in cardiac output and an increase in total
peripheral resistance and an increase in heart rate (Table 4)
.
Ocular Blood Flow during Control Conditions
During control conditions, retinal blood flow was significantly
lower in Abyssinian cats with PRA than in normal cats, whereas local
blood flow in the choroid, iris, and ciliary body was not significantly
different (Table 5)
. There was no significant correlation between retinal blood flow and
age (progression of disease), either in cats with PRA (Fig. 1A
) or in normal cats (data not shown). However, local blood flows in the
different parts of the uvea were negatively correlated with age in
Abyssinian cats with PRA (Figs. 1B
1C
1D)
but not in normal cats
(data not shown).

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Figure 1. Blood flow in the retina (A), choroid (B), iris
(C), and ciliary body (D) as a function of age in
cats with progressive retinal atrophy (PRA). Dotted lines,
95% confidence intervals.
|
|
The negative correlation between uveal blood flow and age (Fig. 1) , the
significantly lower tissue weight of the iris (Table 3) , and the large
variability in iridal blood flow (Table 5)
in the cats with PRA
prompted us to divide the cats with PRA into two groups: animals at an
early stage (S0S2) of retinal degeneration and animals at a late
stage (S3S4). This showed that uveal blood flows were significantly
higher in the cats at an early stage of retinal degeneration than in
cats at a late stage, but only blood flow in the ciliary body was
significantly higher than in normal cats (Table 5)
. Because MABP was
slightly higher in the animals with PRA, especially in the younger ones
(early stage), we also calculated the vascular resistances. This showed
that the vascular resistance in the iris was markedly higher in cats at
an advanced stage of PRA, when compared both with cats at an early
stage of the disease and with normal cats (Fig. 2C
). The vascular resistance in the ciliary body was also significantly
increased in cats at a late stage of PRA (Fig. 2D)
, whereas choroidal
vascular resistance was not significantly different between the three
groups (Fig. 2B)
. The vascular resistance in the retina was
significantly higher in cats at a late stage of PRA than in normal cats
(Fig. 2A) .
Effects of Indomethacin and L-NA on Ocular Blood Flows
In normal cats, ocular blood flows were not affected by
indomethacin, whereas L-NA caused a significant reduction of blood flow
in the choroid, iris, and ciliary body (Fig. 3A
).
In cats with PRA, local blood flow in the iris was more than doubled
after indomethacin, both at an early (Fig. 3B)
and a late (Fig. 3C)
stage of retinal degeneration, whereas local blood flows in the
choroid, ciliary body, and retina were unaffected. Subsequent
administration of L-NA caused a significant reduction of uveal blood
flows in both groups (Figs. 3B
3C)
.
Formation of Lactate and Uptake of Glucose in the Outer Retina
In cats with PRA, the retinal formation of lactate was 0.111 ± 0.035 µmol min-1 (n = 8)
compared with 0.318 ± 0.024 µmol min-1
(n = 8) in normal cats (P
0.001;
unpaired t-test) after indomethacin only. This difference
persisted also after the subsequent administration of L-NA (Fig. 4A
). The formation of lactate was negatively correlated with age in cats
with PRA (Fig. 5A
), but not in normal cats (data not shown).

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Figure 5. Formation of lactate (A) and uptake of glucose
(B) in the outer retina as a function of age in cats with
progressive retinal atrophy (PRA). Dotted lines, 95%
confidence intervals.
|
|
The retinal uptake of glucose appeared to be slightly higher in cats
with PRA than in normal cats, but the difference was not statistically
significant (Fig. 4B)
. There was no correlation between glucose uptake
and age either in cats with PRA (Fig. 5B) or in normal cats (data not
shown). The glucose uptake was significantly reduced after the
administration of L-NA, in cats with PRA as well as in normal cats
(Fig. 4B)
.
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
The present study shows that retinal blood flow is severely
decreased in Abyssinian cats with retinal degeneration, whereas the
choroidal microcirculation is not significantly affected. Furthermore,
iridal blood flow is markedly decreased in cats with PRA, at advanced
stages of the disease.
The retinal arterio-venous passage time is increased in RP
patients,20
and measurement of blood flow velocities, with
laser Doppler or color Doppler, have given lower values in RP patients
than in normal subjects,21
22
23
indicating that retinal
blood flow is decreased in patients with RP. This suggestion is further
supported by the present experiments, with actual measurement of
retinal blood flow, in an animal model of RP. It has also been reported
that pulsatile ocular blood flow is significantly decreased in RP
patients, which was suggested to be due to decreased choroidal blood
flow.24
In the present experiments, the choroidal blood
flow was negatively correlated with age in the cats with PRA, but the
choroidal vascular resistance was not significantly different between
cats at an early and a late stage of retinal degeneration, nor was it
significantly different from that in normal cats. This indicates that
the negative correlation between choroidal blood flow and age in the
cats with PRA was mainly due the higher blood pressure and hence higher
choroidal blood flow in the younger cats. Thus, we found no evidence of
a disturbed choroidal microcirculation in the Abyssinian cats with PRA.
Whether this is a true difference between RP patients and the cats with
PRA or is due to differences in methodology remains to be established.
Interestingly, vascular resistance in the anterior uvea was
significantly increased, especially in the iris, in cats at a late
stage of retinal degeneration, indicating that the vessels of the
anterior uvea are affected by the disease as well as the retinal
vessels.
One may suspect that the attenuation of the retinal blood
vessels1
and the diminished retinal blood flow are
secondary effects due to the degenerative process in the outer retina,
because the degeneration most likely will cause hyperoxia and hence
vasoconstriction in the inner retina. This has recently been confirmed
by determination of retinal oxygen tension profiles in Abyssinian cats
with PRA.25
At least two factors would contribute to the
development of hyperoxia in the inner retina. First, as the
photoreceptors degenerate, the oxygen demand in the outer retina will
diminish, which will increase the gradient for diffusion of oxygen from
the outer to the inner retina. Second, with progression of the disease,
the outer nuclear layer decreases in thickness and the outer plexiform
layer becomes thinner as well.1
3
Thus, the total
thickness of the outer retina decreases, thereby decreasing the
diffusion distance from the choroidal microcirculation to the inner
retina. However, it is worth noting that the two cats that did not yet
show any clinical signs of the disease (S0) had surprisingly low blood
flow in the retina (4.5 and 4.6 g min-1
(100 g)-1, respectively), whereas the two other
cats (stages S1 and S2) in the early group had retinal blood flow
values comparable to normal cats, indicating that retinal blood flow
may be differently affected at different stages of the disease.
The maintained high blood flow through the choroid in the cats with PRA
indicate that the choroidal blood flow is not regulated by the
metabolic demand of the outer retina, suggesting that the high
choroidal blood flow may have other functions, such as controlling the
retinal temperature. However, only a few percent of the oxygen is
extracted as the blood passes through the
choroicapillaries,26
which ought to create a high oxygen
tension in the healthy choroid. A decreased oxygen extraction, which
could be expected in the cats with PRA, may therefore have a little or
no effect on the oxygen tension in the choroid and hence on choroidal
blood flow.
In the cats at an advanced stage of PRA, the iridal blood flow was
significantly increased by indomethacin, indicating that the high
vascular resistance and hence low iridal blood flow during control
conditions were at least in part caused by formation of cyclooxygenase
products. Most prostaglandins act as vasodilators in the
eye,27
whereas the thromboxane analogue U-46619 causes
vasoconstriction.28
Normally, there is a balance between
the vasoconstrictor thromboxane A2
(TXA2) and the vasodilator prostacycline
(PGI2). An increased ratio of
TXA2/PGI2 has previously
been suggested to be involved in the development of diabetic
retinopathy29
30
as well as retinopathy of
prematurity.31
32
Although indomethacin had no effect on
retinal blood flow in the present experiments, the increase in iridal
blood flow indicates that an imbalance between
TXA2 and PGI2 also may play
a role in the progressive retinal atrophy in the Abyssinian cat.
Interestingly, indomethacin increased iridal blood flow in Abyssinian
cats at an early stage of the disease, although blood flow in the iris
was normal or higher than normal in these animals under control
conditions. This indicates that there may be an imbalance in the ratio
of TXA2/PGI2 and hence
disturbances of the iridal microcirculation even before there are any
clinical signs of the disease.
In the Abyssinian cats with PRA, the formation of lactate in the outer
retina was approximately one third that observed in the normal cats.
The decreased formation of lactate was apparent already at early stages
of the disease; only one cat, which carried the disease but did not
show any clinical symptoms of it (S0), had a lactate production
comparable to normal cats (see Fig. 5
). In addition to the outer
segments of the photoreceptors, the retinal pigmented epithelial cells
and the Müller cells contribute to the formation of lactate in
the outer retina. Furthermore, the Müller cells have been shown
to produce lactate that is taken up and used by the
photoreceptors.9
The results of the present experiments,
indicate that this metabolic pathway is either downregulated as the
degeneration of the photoreceptors progresses or it is normally not a
major metabolic pathway, because then one would have expected the
arteriovenous difference for lactate to be increased in the Abyssinian
cats with PRA. Considering the reduced metabolic demands in the outer
retina in the cats with PRA, it may seem surprising that the decreased
formation of lactate was not accompanied by a decreased uptake of
glucose. Actually, the uptake of glucose appeared to increase (not
statistically significant) in the cats with PRA, which could be due to
increased diffusion of glucose from the outer to the inner retina,
because the supply of glucose to the inner retina will decrease with
the diminished retinal blood flow.
In conclusion, the present investigation shows that retinal blood flow
is severely decreased in Abyssinian cats at a late stage of retinal
degeneration, whereas the choroidal microcirculation is not
significantly affected by the disease. The vascular resistance in the
iris was significantly higher in cats at a late stage of PRA,
indicating that the disease affects the iridal blood vessels as well.
Indomethacin increased iridal blood flow in cats with PRA, but not in
normal cats, which suggests that the high vascular resistance in the
iris at least in part is caused by cyxlooxygenase products. Further
studies are needed to determine whether the vascular changes
merely are secondary to the retinal degeneration or if they
contribute to the progression of the disease as an aggravating factor.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, May 1997 and May 1998.
Supported by The Swedish Medical Research Council (Grants B96-14X-11587 and B96-19X-09938) and Foundation Fighting Blindness.
Submitted for publication June 19, 2000; revised November 6, 2000; accepted November 29, 2000.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
Corresponding author: Siv F. E. Nilsson, Department of Medicine and Care, Division of Pharmacology, Faculty of Health Science, University of Linköping, SE-581 85 Linköping, Sweden. sivni{at}imv.liu.se
 |
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L. Padnick-Silver, J. J. K. Derwent, E. Giuliano, K. Narfstrom, and R. A. Linsenmeier
Retinal oxygenation and oxygen metabolism in abyssinian cats with a hereditary retinal degeneration.
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
August 1, 2006;
47(8):
3683 - 3689.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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