Swelling and loss of photoreceptors in chronic human and experimental glaucomas

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Abstract

Objective: To determine whether outer retinal changes occur in chronic, presumed primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG). Methods: The outer retinas from 128 human eyes with a diagnosis of chronic glaucoma (presumably POAG in most cases) and 90 control eyes were examined histologically by 3 masked observers for photoreceptor swelling and loss. Retinas from 9 rhesus monkeys with glaucoma induced experimentally by laser trabecular destruction were compared with 7 fellow (control) eyes. The mean pressure elevations in the eyes with laser trabecular destruction ranged from 26.6 to 53.6 mm Hg with durations varying from 7 to 33 weeks. Results: Swelling of the red- and green-sensitive cones was observed in a statistically significantly greater proportion of human eyes with presumed POAG compared with the control eyes. Patchy loss of red/green cones and rods was also found in some of the glaucomatous retinas. In a subset of the human eyes with end-stage disease, cone swelling was a variable finding. Although no photoreceptor loss was found in the 9 monkey eyes with experimental glaucoma, 8 had swelling of their red/green cones that was remarkably similar to that seen in the human eyes. Swelling was not present in any of the control monkey eyes. Conclusions: The photoreceptors are affected by chronically elevated intraocular pressure. Clinical Relevance: These findings may explain some of the abnormalities of color vision and the electrophysiological effects that have been observed in patients with POAG.

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Nork, T. M., Ver Hoeve, J. N., Poulsen, G. L., Nickells, R. W., Davis, M. D., Weber, A. J., … Millecchia, L. L. (2000). Swelling and loss of photoreceptors in chronic human and experimental glaucomas. Archives of Ophthalmology, 118(2), 235–245. https://doi.org/10.1001/archopht.118.2.235

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