Abstract

Male and female Fischer 344 rats of three different ages (12, 18, and 25 months) have been examined for the presence of photoreceptor (PR) cell loss and for occurrence of scleral cartilage and bone formation. In addition, male and female rats, aged 11 months at the beginning of the experiments, were exposed to chronic stress for either 0.5, 2, 4, or 6 months. Photoreceptor cell death gradually increases during the aging process and is exacerbated by exposure to chronic stress. It is more severe in the peripheral than the central retina and exposure to stress increases this pattern of cell loss. The superior retina is more severely affected than the inferior hemisphere in aging and during stress. The incidence of scleral cartilage or bone formation increases with age in male and female rats, but with stress exposure an increase is seen in males only. Bone formations occur more frequently in male than in female animals and are almost always (97%) located in the superior hemisphere of the eye. Although there appears to be a direct relationship between photoreceptor cell death and the occurrence of scleral ossifications in group data, in individual eyes the bone formations are not always associated with severity of PR cell loss. The relationship of PR cell death and incidence of scleral ossification to gender and to exposure to stress supports a hypothesis for an endocrine basis of ocular aging.

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