Abstract

The effects of timolol maleate on intraocular pressure (IOP) and the severity of retinopathy induced by exposure to 80% oxygen were studied in newborn Wistar rats. One drop of timolol maleate (0.25%) instilled in each eye twice a day for the first ten days of life substantially reduced intraocular pressure without significantly modifying arterial pressure. Forty percent of the ratlings treated in this way failed to develop oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR) after exposure to 80% oxygen for the first five days of life; in the other 60% OIR was less severe than that seen in an identically oxygenated group that did not receive timolol. The authors hypothesize that the pharmacologically induced reduction in IOP may have attenuated the effects of the high concentrations of oxygen on the immature retinal vessels by improving the ocular perfusion pressure. The possibility that timolol maleate also exerts a direct action on the caliber of these vessels cannot be excluded.

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