Review Article

Myasthenia gravis

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Abstract: Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune antibody-mediated disorder which causes fluctuating weakness in ocular, bulbar and limb skeletal muscles. There are two major clinical types of MG. Ocular MG (OMG) affects extra ocular muscles associated with eye movement and eyelid function and generalized MG results in muscle weakness throughout the body. Patients with OMG have painless fluctuating extra ocular muscles weakness, diplopia and ptosis accompanied by normal visual acuity and pupillary function. Frequently, patients with OMG develop generalized MG over 24 months. Pure OMG is more often earlier in onset (<45 years) than generalized MG. It can also occur as part of an immune-genetic disorder or paraneoplastic syndrome related to thymus tumors. Diagnosis is based on clinical manifestations, laboratory findings, electrophysiological evaluation and pharmacologic tests. Therapeutic strategies for MG consist of symptom relieving medications (e.g., acetylcholine esterase inhibitors), immunosuppressive agents, and surgical intervention (e.g., thymectomy).

Cornea and Anterior segment

AB083. Intraocular lens biocompatibility: a novel, objective approach

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Background: Understanding factors that contribute to posterior capsular opacification (PCO) development is a significant public concern as treatment can lead to complications. In order to prevent PCO, a better understanding of intraocular lens (IOL) characteristics, including design and material, and patient interaction is required. Herein, we performed a retrospective multivariable analysis to determine which factors (IOL and patient based) were least likely to result in PCO.

Methods: One hundred eighty post-mortem eyes with implanted IOLs were collected from the Minnesota Eye Bank, along with clinical history, including date of cataract surgery and IOL model number. The capsular bag (CB) with the IOL implant was removed from all eyes to obtain digital images. PCO outcome was quantified on CB images using an objective, automated custom image analyzer (Medical Parachute Automated Detector Opacification Software). The software measured intensity and area of the opacification within the IOL optic edge, intra-optic edge (IOE = intensity/area), and in Soemmering’s ring (SR = intensity/area). Epidemiologic analysis assessed which IOL characteristics and patient-related factors correlated with PCO. IOL factors included material, edge design, lens filter, company, IOL model, decentration and time from cataract surgery to death. Patient factors included sex, age and diabetes, among others.

Results: Multivariate analyses showed non-diabetic patients had less PCO (P=0.05). Individuals 50–80 years old compared to 80+ had lower SR PCO (P=0.04). Non-blue light filter IOLs had lower SR and IOE PCO compared to filter IOLs (P=0.03, 0.001). Square and frosted optic edge design had lower SR and IOE PCO rates compared to OptiEdge and round optic edge design (P=0.002, 0.02). The IOL model that had the least PCO was the ZA9003 model, but this was only significant for SR and not IOE PCO (P=0.04). Adjusting for patient-factors, IOL lens model was no longer a confounding factor for PCO. Patients with an IOL implanted for <7 years had lower SR PCO, whereas lower IOE PCO was only seen in implants <4 years old (P=0.0001, 0.04).

Conclusions: In order to generate a lens that does not develop PCO, it is critical to understand the IOL- and patient-related factors that lead to PCO development. Based on our data, the most susceptible patients are elderly and diabetic, and it may be preferable to implant a square and frosted edge lens without blue-light filtering in this cohort.

Retina and Posterior Segment

AB029. The role of inducible nitric oxide synthase in deleterious effects of Kinin B1 receptor in diabetic retinopathy

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Background: Overexpression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) has been reported in diabetic retinopathy (DR). The kinin B1 receptor (B1R) is also overexpressed in DR, and can stimulate iNOS via Gαi/ERK/MAPK pathway. We previously showed that the topical administration of a B1R antagonist, LF22-0542, significantly reduces leukocyte infiltration, increased vascular permeability and overexpression of several inflammatory mediators, including iNOS in DR. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine whether the pro-inflammatory effects of B1R are attributed to oxidative stress caused by the activation of iNOS pathway in order to identify new therapeutic targets for the treatment of DR. iNOS and B1R being absent in the normal retina, their inhibition is unlikely to result in undesirable side effects. The approach will be no invasive by eye application of drops.

Methods: Diabetes was induced in male Wistar rats (200–230 g) by a single intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (STZ, 65 mg/kg b.w). One week later, rats were randomly divided into four groups (N=5) and treated for one week as follows: Gr 1: control rats treated with the selective iNOS inhibitor (1,400 W, 0.06 μM twice a day by eye-drops ×7 days), Gr 2, STZ-diabetic rats treated with 1,400 W, Gr 3: control rats received a selective B1R agonist [Sar (D-Phe8)-des-Arg9-BK, 100 μg twice a week] by intravitreal injections (itrv) and treated with 1,400 W, Gr 4: STZ-diabetic rats + B1R agonist +1,400 W. At the end of treatment and two weeks post-STZ, three series of experiments were carried out to measure vascular permeability (by Evans blue dye method) and the expression of vasoactive and inflammatory mediators, including iNOS, VEGF-A, VEGF-R2, IL-1β, Cox-2, TNF-α, bradykinin 1 and 2 receptors and carboxypeptidase M/kininase 1 (by Western Blotting and qRT-PCR). The nitrosative stress (nitrosylation of proteins) was also assessed by Western Blotting. One-way Anova test with Bonferroni post hoc was used for statistical analysis.

Results: STZ-diabetic rats showed a significant increase in retinal vascular permeability (22.8 μg/g Evans blue dye per g of fresh retinas, P=0.016) compared with control rats and control treated rats (17.2 and 16.8 μg/g respectively). The injections of B1R agonist amplified the increase of vascular permeability which was normalized by the 1,400 W. The overexpression of inflammatory markers was also normalized by the 1,400 W in STZ-diabetic rats received or not the B1R agonist.

Conclusions: These results support a contribution of iNOS in the deleterious effects of B1R in this model of diabetic retinopathy. Hence, iNOS inhibition by ocular application of 1,400 W may represent a promising and non-invasive therapeutic approach in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy.

Retina and Posterior Segment

AB010. Promotion of BMP9/ALK1 quiescence signaling for the prevention of diabetic macular edema (DME)

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Background: Sight-threatening diabetic macular edema (DME) is caused by increased microvascular permeability. While few direct vascular targeting strategies are available, VEGF pathway inhibition has shown to be effective in reducing retinal vascular leakage but is associated with non-negligible side effects. Thus, more options are needed. Vascular specific Activin-like kinase receptor type I (ALK1) pathway and its circulating ligand Bone morphogenetic protein-9 (BMP9) is known for its potent quiescent and stabilizing effect on the vasculature. However, little is known about this pathway in the context of microvascular permeability associated with diabetes. We hypothesize that BMP9/ALK1 pathway is inhibited in diabetic (DB) retinas leading to vascular destabilization and leakage and that its activation could re-establish proper vascular endothelial barrier functions (EBF).

Methods: The effect of hyperglycemia (i.e., HG >10 mM of D-glucose) on Alk1 signaling was evaluated in vitro by subjecting endothelial cells (EC) to increasing concentrations of D-glucose (5, 11, 25 mM) and in vivo using DB mice (Streptozotocin-induced diabetes). The contribution of Alk1 signaling on EBF was evaluated using Evans Blue permeation in inducible endothelial specific Alk1 KO mice. To evaluate the potential protective effects of BMP9/Alk1 signaling on EBF, BMP9 overexpression was achieved using adenoviral delivery in DB mice. Statistical-One-Way ANOVA or Student’s t-test was used.

Results: Endothelial tissue from DB mice showed a significant inhibition of BMP9/ALK1-canonical Smad1,5,8 quiescence signaling (DB n=5; CTL n=4; P<0.01), which was associated with reduced expression of target genes (JAG1, Id1,3, Hey1,2 & HES). Moreover, we showed that retinal hyperpermeability associated with diabetes was exacerbated in Alk1 heterozygote mice (n=4–9/group; P<0.0001). Finally, we demonstrated that activation of Alk1 signaling in ECs prevented vascular permeability induced by HG, both in vitro (n=3; P=0.009) and in vivo (n=4–9/group; P<0.0001).

Conclusions: Consistent with our hypothesis, vascular stability and quiescence induced by BMP9-ALK1 signaling is inhibited in the DB/HG endothelium which could be an important factor in vascular leakage leading to DME. Our results show that activation of this pathway could offer a therapeutically interesting future option to slow down the onset of DME.

Review Article

Treatment for diabetic macular oedema: looking further into the evidence

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Keywords: Diabetic macular edema (DME); diabetic macular oedema (DMO); anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF); laser photocoagulation; randomised clinical trials (RCTs); retina; diabetic retinopathy

Editorial Commentary

Psychophysics in the ophthalmological practice—II. Contrast sensitivity

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Abstract: Contrast is the differential luminance between one object and another. Contrast sensitivity (CS) quantifies the ability to detect this difference: estimating contrast threshold provides information about the quality of vision and helps diagnose and monitor eye diseases. High contrast visual acuity assessment is traditionally performed in the eye care practice, whereas the estimate of the discrimination of low contrast targets, an important complementary task for the perception of details, is far less employed. An example is driving when the contrast between vehicles, obstacles, pedestrians, and the background is reduced by fog. Many conditions can selectively degrade CS, while visual acuity remains intact. In addition to spatial CS, “temporal” CS is defined as the ability to discriminate luminance differences in the temporal domain, i.e., to discriminate information that reaches the visual cortex as a function of time. Likewise, temporal sensitivity of the visual system can be investigated in terms of critical fusion frequency (CFF), an indicator of the integrity of the magnocellular system that is responsible for the perception of transient stimulations. As a matter of fact, temporal resolution can be abnormal in neuro-ophthalmological clinical conditions. This paper aims at considering CS and its application to the clinical practice.

Original Article

Association between donor corneal endothelial cell counts and infectious agent reactivity: an eye bank database analysis

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Background: To evaluate the association between corneal central endothelial cell count (CECC) with reactivity for hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), human T-lymphotropic virus-1 (HTLV1), and syphilis from an eye bank database.

Methods: Eye bank data included 19,159 donors and 38,318 corneas screened for HBV, HCV, HIV, HTLV1, and syphilis from July 2007–May 2015. Linear and binary mixed effects models were used to determine the adjusted marginal effect a positive viral screening test had on CECC and morphology, respectively. The models were adjusted for age, race, gender, lens status, and death to preservation. Eyes with missing data were excluded from the analysis. Statistical significance was defined as P values <0.05.

Results: A total of 18,097 donors and 35,136 corneas were included in the final analysis. Average CECC for eyes with negative viral screening was 2,597±436 while the average CECC for eyes screening positive for syphilis, HBV, HCV, HIV, and HTLV1 were 2,638±392 (P=0.073), 2,569±419 (P=0.815), 2,603±363 (P=0.207), 2,615±360 (P=0.733), and 2,625±436 (P=0.362) respectively.

Conclusions: The presence of HBV, HCV, HIV, HTLV1, and syphilis display no association with a statistically significant difference in CECC when compared to normal non-diseased donors.

Editorial
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  • Eye Science

    主管:中华人民共和国教育部
    主办:中山大学
    承办:中山大学中山眼科中心
    主编:林浩添
    主管:中华人民共和国教育部
    主办:中山大学
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