21 research outputs found

    Genome-wide RNA-Sequencing analysis reveals a distinct fibrosis gene signature in the conjunctiva after glaucoma surgery

    Get PDF
    Fibrosis-related events play a part in most blinding diseases worldwide. However, little is known about the mechanisms driving this complex multifactorial disease. Here we have carried out the first genome-wide RNA-Sequencing study in human conjunctival fibrosis. We isolated 10 primary fibrotic and 7 non-fibrotic conjunctival fibroblast cell lines from patients with and without previous glaucoma surgery, respectively. The patients were matched for ethnicity and age. We identified 246 genes that were differentially expressed by over two-fold and pā€‰<ā€‰0.05, of which 46 genes were upregulated and 200 genes were downregulated in the fibrotic cell lines compared to the non-fibrotic cell lines. We also carried out detailed gene ontology, KEGG, disease association, pathway commons, WikiPathways and protein network analyses, and identified distinct pathways linked to smooth muscle contraction, inflammatory cytokines, immune mediators, extracellular matrix proteins and oncogene expression. We further validated 11 genes that were highly upregulated or downregulated using real-time quantitative PCR and found a strong correlation between the RNA-Seq and qPCR results. Our study demonstrates that there is a distinct fibrosis gene signature in the conjunctiva after glaucoma surgery and provides new insights into the mechanistic pathways driving the complex fibrotic process in the eye and other tissues

    A pilot study on slit lamp-adapted optical coherence tomography imaging of trabeculectomy filtering blebs.

    No full text
    Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Our study aims to identify anatomical characteristics of glaucoma filtering blebs by means of slit lamp-adapted optical coherence tomography (SL-OCT) and to identify new parameters for the functional prognosis of the filter in the early post-operative period. METHODS: Patients with primary open-angle glaucoma, aged 18 years and older, scheduled for primary trabeculectomy at the Department of Ophthalmology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, were considered for our study. All patients underwent standardized trabeculectomy with intra-operative application of mitomycin C. The filtering blebs were evaluated clinically and with SL-OCT on day 1 and 1, 2, 4 and 12 weeks following surgery. The resulting data were analysed and weighed against surgical success. To better understand the SL-OCT data a small comparative histologic study was performed. RESULTS: The study included 20 eyes of 20 patients. After completion of our study, 15 eyes of 15 patients (mean age+/-SD 67 +/- 16 years) were eligible for data analysis and 5 eyes missed at least one follow-up visit. Filtering surgery was considered successful (intraocular pressure < or = 21 mmHg without antiglaucomatous medication) in 11 of 15 eyes. SL-OCT frequently demonstrated multiple hypo-reflective layers within Tenon's capsule ("striping" phenomenon) in the first post-operative week. Presumably, these layers corresponded with drainage channels in the histological specimen. These channels were present in functional filters but not in the failures. In addition, the visualisation of the sclera below the filtering zone was better defined in failures compared with successful filtering blebs ("shading" phenomenon). We observed no differences in the volume and clinical aspect of the blebs in the successful group compared with the unsuccessful group. CONCLUSIONS: Successful filtering blebs show characteristic optical properties on SL-OCT. These phenomena suggest a diffusely enhanced fluid content and the presence of intra-bleb drainage channels in functional filtering blebs
    corecore