Abstract
During normal aging there is a reduction in white matter volume in the cerebral hemispheres and structural abnormalities in myelin in some parts of the central nervous system, but whether nerve fibers are lost with age and whether the myelin changes are ubiquitous is not known. Studying the optic nerve, which is a circumscribed bundle of nerve fibers, offers an opportunity to gain further insight into the effects of normal aging on white matter. The present study examined the optic nerves from young (4-10 years) and old (27-33 years) rhesus monkeys using light and electron microscopy. These nerves had been perfused transcardially to obtain optimal preservation of the tissue. Varying degrees of degeneration were encountered in all the optic nerves from the old monkeys. The changes included myelin abnormalities, similar to those reported in other parts of the central nervous system; the presence of degenerating axons and their sheaths; changes in neuroglial cells; and thickening of the trabeculae of connective tissue in the nerve. The total number of nerve fibers was reduced from an average of 1.6 x 10(6) in the young optic nerves to as few as 4 x 10(5) in one old monkey, and with one exception in all of the old optic nerves the packing density of nerve fibers was less than in any of the young optic nerves. The degenerative changes were most marked in those optic nerves that contained the fewest nerve fibers.
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