The effect of acute hyperglycaemia on the retinal circulation of the normal cat

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Abstract

The retinal microcirculation of anaesthetised normal cats was studied during hyperglycaemia (15 to 55 mmol/l) induced by intravenous infusion of glucose, using high speed cine fluorescence angiography. Saline (0.150 mmol/l) was infused as a control for the volume effect of glucose solution and equiosmolar mannitol was infused as a control for the osmotic effect. The mean retinal arteriolar inflow rate increased from 34±1 mm/sec to 41±4 mm/sec during glucose infusion, and from 46±1 mm/sec to 56±3 mm/sec during mannitol infusion. The blood pressure similarly increased from 105±5 mmHg to 125±2 mmHg during glucose infusion and from 110 ±7 mmHg to 129±1 mmHg during mannitol infusion. During mannitol infusion the increased inflow was accompanied by a reduction in the arteriolar width so that the volume flow remained unchanged. During glucose infusion this constriction did not occur, resulting in a significantly increased volume of retinal blood flow (9±1 μl/min to 12±1 μl/min). © 1980 Springer-Verlag.

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Atherton, A., Hill, D. W., Keen, H., Young, S., & Edwards, E. J. (1980). The effect of acute hyperglycaemia on the retinal circulation of the normal cat. Diabetologia, 18(3), 233–237. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00251922

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