Abstract

The present study examines the interaction of light damage to the retina and streptozotocin (SZ)-induced diabetes in male and female rats during the early development of the disease, when changes occur in the blood-retinal barrier and in pigment cell membranes. Exposure of rats to low illuminance was used to determine the relationship between photically-induced cell death and diabetes. Other groups of animals were exposed to a greater illuminance for shorter time periods (24 hours) in attempts to identify a specific post-treatment day for the effect of diabetes. Blood glucose levels were monitored to indicate the severity of the diabetes. Morphometric analyses and histopathologic observations demonstrated that the outer nuclear layer (ONL, photoreceptor nuclei) was reduced significantly in thickness in female rats exposed to light during a 9 day period after SZ injection, but was unchanged from the control groups when exposed beginning at 12 days after SZ treatment. Removal of the pituitary gland prior to SZ treatment and light exposure resulted in the survival of more photoreceptor cells and prevented the differential in ONL thickness observed between control and diabetic intact animals. Attempts to establish a period of greatest susceptibility of the diabetic retina to photic damage were unsuccessful, but results indicate that prior light history and/or shipment stress might be related to retinal damage from light exposure.

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