Abstract

Light flicker stimulation has been shown to increase inner retinal oxygen metabolism and supply. The purpose of the study was to test the hypothesis that sustained light flicker stimulation of various durations alters the depth profile metrics of oxygen partial pressure in the retinal tissue (tPO2) but not the outer retinal oxygen consumption rate (QO2). In 17 rats, tPO2 depth profiles were derived by phosphorescence lifetime imaging after intravitreal injection of an oxyphor. tPO2 profile metrics, including mean inner retinal tPO2, maximum outer retinal tPO2 and minimum outer retinal tPO2 were determined. QO2 was calculated using a one-dimensional oxygen diffusion model. Data were acquired at baseline (constant light illumination) and during light flicker stimulation at 10 Hz under the same mean illumination levels, and differences between values obtained during flicker and baseline were calculated. None of the tPO2 profile metrics or QO2 differences depended on the duration of light flicker stimulation (R2 ≤ 0.03). No significant change in any of the tPO2 profile metrics was detected with light flicker compared with constant light (P ≥ 0.08). Light flicker decreased QO2 from 0.53 ± 0.29 to 0.38 ± 0.30 mL O2/(min*100 gm), a reduction of 28% (P = 0.02). The retinal compensatory responses to the physiologic challenge of light flicker stimulation were effective in maintaining the levels of oxygen at or near baseline in the inner retina. Oxygen availability to the inner retina during light flicker may also have been enhanced by the decrease in QO2.

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