Abstract

After total retinal ischemia induced experimentally by ophthalmic vessel occlusion followed by reperfusion, studies have reported alterations in retinal oxygen metabolism (MO2), delivery (DO2), and extraction fraction (OEF), as well as visual dysfunction and cell loss. In the current study, under variable durations of ischemia/reperfusion, changes in these oxygen metrics, visual function, retinal thickness, and degeneration markers (gliosis and apoptosis) were assessed and related. Additionally, the prognostic value of MO2 for predicting visual function and retinal thickness outcomes was reported. Sixty-one rats were divided into 5 groups of ischemia duration (0 [sham], 60, 90, 120, or 180 min) and 2 reperfusion durations (1 h, 7 days). Phosphorescence lifetime and blood flow imaging, electroretinography, and optical coherence tomography were performed. MO2 reduction was related to visual dysfunction, retinal thinning, increased gliosis and apoptosis after 7-days reperfusion. Impairment in MO2 after 1-h reperfusion predicted visual function and retinal thickness outcomes after 7-days reperfusion. Since MO2 can be measured in humans, findings from analogous studies may find value in the clinical setting.

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