Regional optic nerve damage in experimental mouse glaucoma.
Mabuchi Fumihiko, Aihara Makoto, Mackey Mason R, Lindsey James D, Weinreb Robert N
AI Summary
Mouse experimental glaucoma showed preferential superior optic nerve axon loss, suggesting regional vulnerability to damage. This highlights the importance of topographic assessment in glaucoma research.
Abstract
Purpose
To assess the relationship between regional variation of axon loss and optic nerve head anatomy in laser-induced experimental glaucoma in the mouse.
Methods
Experimental glaucoma was induced unilaterally in eight NIH Swiss black mice. Intraocular pressure (IOP) was measured for 12 weeks, and the mice were killed. The eyes were enucleated, and both optic nerves were dissected and processed conventionally for electron microscopy. Low- and high-magnification images of the optic nerve cross sections 300 microm posterior to the globe were collected systematically and masked before analysis. For each nerve, cross-sectional area was measured in low-magnification micrographs. Axon number and density were determined in the high-magnification micrographs. Loss of axonal density was compared between the superior and inferior and nasal and temporal areas of the optic nerve cross section. Additional cross-section micrographs were collected at 10- or 20-microm intervals throughout the optic nerve head.
Results
In the treated (glaucoma) eyes, mean IOP was 44% higher than that in the control eyes. The optic nerve cross-sectional area, mean axonal density, and total axonal number were significantly less than those in the control eyes (P < 0.01 for each). Axon loss in the superior optic nerve was greater than in the inferior optic nerve in each glaucomatous eye (P = 0.012). The ratio of axonal density in the superior and inferior optic nerve (superior-to-inferior [S/I] ratio) in all treated eyes was <1.0 and significantly lower than that in the control eyes (P = 0.012). The central retinal vessels occupied approximately 20% of the central optic nerve head cross-sectional area, gradually shifted position ventrally as they progressed toward the scleral foramen (the mouse does not have a lamina cribrosa), and exited the inferior retrobulbar optic nerve adjacent to the posterior of the globe.
Conclusions
Ocular hypertension in the mouse eye sufficient to cause optic nerve damage induces preferential loss of superior optic nerve axons. Optic nerve axon loss appeared less among the axons that were near the major optic nerve blood vessels at the scleral foramen. Topographic differences in optic nerve axon loss should be considered when evaluating optic nerve damage in experimental laser-induced glaucoma in the mouse.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Related Articles5
Effects of Stress and Strain on the Optic Nerve Head on the Progression of Glaucoma.
Observational StudyAssociation of Intraocular Pressure With Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thinning in Patients With Glaucoma.
Cohort StudyInfluence of Sex on Neuroretinal Degeneration: Six-Month Follow-Up in Rats With Chronic Glaucoma.
Basic ScienceGlaucoma conversion of the contralateral eye in unilateral normal-tension glaucoma patients: a 5-year follow-up study.
Cohort StudyThe role of intracranial pressure in glaucoma and therapeutic implications.
ReviewIs this article assigned to the wrong chapter(s)? Let us know.