Short-and long-term study of the impact of focal blue light-emitting diode-induced phototoxicity in adult albino rats

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Abstract

Background: In adult rats we study the short-and long-term effects of focal blue light-emitting diode (LED)-induced phototoxicity (LIP) on retinal thickness and Iba-1+ activation. Methods: The left eyes of previously dark-adapted Sprague Dawley (SD) rats were photoexposed to a blue LED (20 s, 200 lux). In vivo longitudinal monitoring of retinal thickness, fundus images, and optical retinal sections was performed from 1 to 30 days (d) after LIP with SD-OCT. Ex vivo, we analysed the population of S-cone and Iba-1+ cells within a predetermined fixed-size circular area (PCA) centred on the lesion. Results: LIP resulted in a circular focal lesion readily identifiable in vivo by fundus examination, which showed within the PCAs a progressive thinning of the outer retinal layer, and a diminution of the S-cone population to 19% by 30 d. In parallel to S-cone loss, activated Iba-1+ cells delineated the lesioned area and acquired an ameboid morphology with peak expression at 3 d after LIP. Iba-1+ cells adopted a more relaxed-branched morphology at 7 d and by 14–30 d their morphology was fully branched. Conclusion: LIP caused a progressive reduction of the outer retina with loss of S cones and a parallel dynamic activation of microglial cells in the lesioned area.

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Miralles de Imperial-Ollero, J. A., Gallego-Ortega, A., Norte-Muñoz, M., Di Pierdomenico, J., Bernal-Garro, J. M., Valiente-Soriano, F. J., & Vidal-Sanz, M. (2021). Short-and long-term study of the impact of focal blue light-emitting diode-induced phototoxicity in adult albino rats. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(18). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22189742

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