Search results for "Retina"

showing 10 items of 864 documents

Metabolomic Analysis of the Effect of Postnatal Hypoxia on the Retina in a Newly Born Piglet Model

2013

The availability of reliable biomarkers of brain injury secondary to birth asphyxia could substantially improve clinical grading, therapeutic intervention strategies, and prognosis. In this study, changes in the metabolome of retinal tissue caused by profound hypoxia in an established neonatal piglet model were investigated using an ultra performance liquid chromatography - quadrupole time of flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-QTOFMS) untargeted metabolomic approach, which included Partial Least Squares - Discriminant Analysis (PLSDA) multivariate data analysis. The initial identification of a set of discriminant metabolites from UPLC-QTOFMS data was confirmed by target UPLC-MS/MS and allowed t…

ResuscitationSwinelcsh:MedicineBrain damageBioinformaticsBiochemistryPediatricsRetinachemistry.chemical_compoundMetabolomicsDiagnostic MedicinePregnancyTandem Mass SpectrometryPathologyMetabolomemedicineAnimalsMetabolomicsEye ProteinsHypoxialcsh:ScienceBiologyLiquid ChromatographyAsphyxiaChromatographyMultidisciplinarybusiness.industrylcsh:RObstetrics and GynecologyRetinalHypoxia (medical)Pregnancy ComplicationsChemistryMetabolismAnimals NewbornchemistrySmall MoleculesMedicineBiomarker (medicine)lcsh:QMetabolic PathwaysNeonatologymedicine.symptombusinessBiomarkersResearch ArticleGeneral PathologyChromatography LiquidPLoS ONE
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Ex Vivo Retinal Explant Cultures to Study Angiogenic Responses

2012

The mouse retina has long been regarded as an easily accessible and advantageous system to investigate important questions of developmental angiogenesis. The protocol presented here profits from the suitability of the mouse retina as experimental model and describes an ex vivo culture technique of mouse retina explants that allows the quantitative assessment of angiogenic responses to pharmacological manipulations. The technique involves the extraction of the retina from the intact eye, the immediate flat mounting of the tissue on a hydrophilic membrane and the acute stimulation or inhibition of angiogenic processes of the developing vessels in their physiological context ex vivo. The numbe…

RetinaAngiogenesisContext (language use)StimulationBiologyCell biologyVascular endothelial growth factorchemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistrymedicineFilopodiaGanglion cell layerEx vivo
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Human NCL Neuropathology

2015

AbstractThe neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) currently encompass fourteen genetically different forms, CLN1 to CLN14, but are all morphologically marked by loss of nerve cells, particularly in the cerebral and cerebellar cortices, and the cerebral and extracerebral formation of lipopigments. These lipopigments show distinct ultrastructural patterns, i.e., granular, curvilinear/rectilinear and fingerprint profiles. They contain−although to a different degree among the different CLN forms−subunit C of ATP synthase, saposins A and D, and beta-amyloid proteins. Extracerebral pathology, apart from lipopigment formation, which provides diagnostic information, is scant or non-existent. The ret…

RetinaBatten diseaseLipopigmentsNeuropathologyAnatomyBiologymedicine.diseaseFingerprint profilesLysosomeAtrophymedicine.anatomical_structureNeuronal ceroid lipofuscinosesUltrastructureLysosomeNerve cellsmedicineImmunohistochemistryMolecular MedicineNeuroscienceMolecular BiologyNeuronal Ceroid-LipofuscinosesBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease
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Serous Detachment of the Retina: A Complication of Branch Retinal Vein Stenosis

2005

The author reports a case of serous detachment of the retina, which has developed in an eye with veno-venous collaterals, secondary to stenosis of a branch of the central retinal vein near the optic disc. This complication has not previously been described in this retinal vascular obstructive disease.

RetinaCentral retinal veinRetinal pigment epitheliumRetinal Veingenetic structuresmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryAnatomymedicine.diseaseFluorescein angiographyeye diseasesOphthalmologySerous fluidmedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineBranch retinal vein occlusionsense organsbusinessOptic discAnnals Of Ophthalmology
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The Brain’s Camera. Optimal Algorithms for Wiring the Eye to the Brain Shape How We See

2016

The problem of sending information at long distances, without significant attenuation and at a low cost, is common to both artificial and natural environments. In the brain, a widespread strategy to solve the cost-efficiency trade off in long distance communication is the presence of convergent pathways, or bottlenecks. In the visual system, for example, to preserve resolution, information is acquired by a first layer with a large number of neurons (the photoreceptors in the retina) and then compressed into a much smaller number of units in the output layer (the retinal ganglion cells), to send that information to the brain at the lowest possible metabolic cost. Recently, we found experimen…

RetinaComputer sciencebusiness.industryFunction (mathematics)Lateral geniculate nucleusRetinal ganglionmedicine.anatomical_structureRetinal ganglion cellReceptive fieldCortex (anatomy)Digital image processingmedicineComputer visionArtificial intelligencebusinessAlgorithm
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Keratoconus apex positions impact on visual acuity and contrast sensitivity

2020

The change of corneal shape in keratoconus subjects can impact the optical quality of the eye on the retina and it reduces the contrast sensitivity by light scattering. The aim of our study was to estimate the keratoconus subjects’ contrast sensitivity and visual acuity depending on keratoconus apex position. We included 45 keratoconus subjects (77 eyes), which have keratoconus in the first to the third stage, in our study. There were 33 eyes with keratoconus apex in the central part of the cornea and 46 eyes with keratoconus apex in the periphery of the cornea. Contrast sensitivity and visual acuity were measured at 3 m with and without the best possible spectacle correction using the FrAC…

RetinaKeratoconusmedicine.medical_specialtyVisual acuitygenetic structuresbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesOptical qualityApex (geometry)medicine.anatomical_structureCorneaOphthalmologyMedicineContrast (vision)sense organsmedicine.symptombusinessSensitivity (electronics)media_commonBiomedical Spectroscopy, Microscopy, and Imaging
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Retinal ultrastructure of neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis in the Dalmatian dog

1985

Ultrastructural studies of the retinae in two NCL-affected Dalmatian dogs revealed ubiquitous accumulation of lipopigments in numerous cell types of the retina, the fine structure of which closely resembled that seen in NCL-affected English setters. Photoreceptors and other retinal cell types were largely intact. These findings show that the retinal involvement in NCL of our Dalmatian dogs is identical to that of NCL-affected English setters. It also shows that in canine NCL a severe retinopathy, regularly encountered in human childhood NCL, does not develop. Thus, the NCL of Dalmatian dogs —and English setters — represents a reliable model to study human NCL, but for human retinopathia pig…

RetinaPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCell typeRetinalBiologymedicine.diseaseRetinaPathology and Forensic MedicineMicroscopy ElectronCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundDalmatian dogDogsmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryNeuronal Ceroid-LipofuscinosesmedicineUltrastructureAnimalsNeuronal ceroid lipofuscinosisDog DiseasesNeurology (clinical)Retinal cellRetinopathyActa Neuropathologica
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Neurosteroids in the Retina

2003

Steroids may have a powerful role in neuronal degeneration. Recent research has revealed that steroids may influence the onset and progression of some retinal disorders as well as neurodegenerative diseases and, as in brain, they accumulate in the retina via a local synthesis (neurosteroids) and metabolism of blood-circulating steroid hormones. Their crucial role as neurodegenerative and neuroprotective agents has been also upheld in a retinal excitotoxic paradigm. These findings are reviewed especially from the emerging perspective that after an insult local changes in steroidogenic responses and consequent neurosteroid availability might turn out to be offensive or defensive cellular adap…

RetinaRetinal DisorderNeuroactive steroidGeneral NeuroscienceLong-term potentiationRetinalBiologyNeuroprotectionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologychemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structureHistory and Philosophy of SciencechemistrymedicinePregnenolone sulfateNeuroscienceHormoneAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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How Does the Eye Breathe?

2003

Visual performance of the vertebrate eye requires large amounts of oxygen, and thus the retina is one of the highest oxygen-consuming tissues of the body. Here we show that neuroglobin, a neuron-specific respiratory protein distantly related to hemoglobin and myoglobin, is present at high amounts in the mouse retina (approximately 100 microm). The estimated concentration of neuroglobin in the retina is thus about 100-fold higher than in the brain and is in the same range as that of myoglobin in the muscle. Neuroglobin is expressed in all neurons of the retina but not in the retinal pigment epithelium. Neuroglobin mRNA was detected in the perikarya of the nuclear and ganglion layers of the n…

RetinaRetinal pigment epitheliumgenetic structuresSkeletal muscleRetinalCell BiologyAnatomyBiologyBiochemistryeye diseasesCell biologyRespiratory proteinchemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structureMyoglobinchemistryNeuroglobinmedicinesense organsMolecular BiologyPhotoreceptor inner segmentJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Visual motion integration controls attractiveness of objects in walking flies and a mobile robot

2008

Walking fruit flies are attracted by near-by objects. They estimate the distance to these objects by the parallax motion of their images on the retina. Here we provide evidence from robot simulations that distance is assessed by motion integration over large parts of the visual field and time periods of 0.5 s to 2 s. The process in flies is not selective to image motion created by the self-motion of the fly but also sensitive to object motion and to the pattern contrast of objects. Added visual motion (e.g. oscillations) makes objects more attractive than their stationary counterparts. Front-to-back motion, the natural parallax motion on the eyes of a forward-translating fly, is preferred. …

Retinabusiness.industryComputer scienceOrientation (computer vision)media_common.quotation_subjectMobile robotMotion (physics)Visual fieldmedicine.anatomical_structureMotion estimationComputer graphics (images)medicineRobotContrast (vision)Computer visionArtificial intelligencebusinessParallaxmedia_common2008 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems
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