48 research outputs found

    Canine Multifocal Retinopathy in the Australian Shepherd: A Case Report

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    A 1-year-old Australian Shepherd (AS) was presented for a routine hereditary eye examination. During the examination multiple raised, brown to orange lesions were noted in the fundus, which could not be attributed to a known retinal disease in this breed. As they clinically most closely resembled canine multifocal retinopathy (cmr) and no indication of an acquired condition was found, genetic tests for BEST1 gene mutations were performed. These showed the dog to be homozygous for the cmr1 (C73T/R25X) gene defect. Furthermore, ultrasound (US), electroretinography (ERG), and optical coherence tomography were performed, confirming changes typical for cmr. Subsequently, the AS pedigree members were genetically and clinically tested, demonstrating autosomal recessive inheritance with no clinical symptoms in carrier animals, as was previously described for cmr. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of canine multifocal retinopathy in the AS breed. Further investigations are under way

    Autoantibodies Activating the β2-Adrenergic Receptor Characterize Patients With Primary and Secondary Glaucoma

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    Recently, agonistic autoantibodies (agAAb) activating the β2-adrenergic receptor were detected in primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) or ocular hypertension (OHT) patients and were linked to intraocular pressure (IOP) (1). The aim of the present study was to quantify β2-agAAb in the sera of glaucoma suspects and patients with primary and secondary glaucoma. Patients with OHT (n = 33), pre-perimetric POAG (pre-POAG; n = 11), POAG (n = 28), and 11 secondary OAG (SOAG) underwent ophthalmological examinations including examinations with Octopus G1 perimetry and morphometry. Twenty-five healthy individuals served as controls. Serum-derived IgG samples were analyzed for β2-agAAb using a functional bioassay. The beat-rate-increase of spontaneously beating cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes was monitored with 1.6 beats/15 s as cut-off. None of the sera of normal subjects showed β2-agAAb. In POAG or OHT patients increased beating rates of 4.1 ± 2.2 beats/15 s, and 3.7 ± 2.8 beats/15 s were detected (p > 0.05). Glaucoma patients with (POAG) and without perimetric (pre-POAG) defects did not differ (pre-POAG 4.4 ± 2.6 beats/15 s, POAG 4.1 ± 2.0 beats/15 s, p > 0.05). Patients with SOAG yielded mean beating rates of 4.7 ± 1.7 beats/15 s (p > 0.05). β2-agAAb were seen in 73% of OHT, 82% of pre-POAG, 82% of POAG, and 91% SOAG patients (p 0.05). The robust β2-agAAb seropositivity in patients with OHT, pre-POAG, POAG, and SOAG suggest a primary common role for β2-agAAb starting early in glaucoma pathophysiology and turned out to be a novel marker identifying all patients with increased IOP independent of glaucoma stage and entity

    Profiling of WDR36 Missense Variants in German Patients with Glaucoma

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    PURPOSE. Mutations in WDR36 were recently reported in patients with adult-onset primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG). In this study, the prevalence of WDR36 variants was investigated in patients with glaucoma who were of German descent with diverse age of onset and intraocular pressure levels. METHODS. Recruited were 399 unrelated patients with glaucoma and 376 healthy subjects of comparable age and origin, who had had repeated normal findings in ophthalmic examinations. The frequency of observed variants was obtained by direct sequencing of the entire WDR36 coding region. RESULTS. A total of 44 WDR36 allelic variants were detected, including 14 nonsynonymous amino acid alterations, of which 7 are novel (P31T, Y97C, D126N, T403A, H411Y, H411L, and P487R) and 7 have been reported (L25P, D33E, A163V, H212P, A449T, D658G and I264V). Of these 14 variants, 6 were classified as polymorphisms as they were detected in patients and control individuals at similar frequencies. Eight variants present in 15 patients (3.7%) but only 1 control individual (0.2%) were defined as putative disease-causing variants (P 0.0005). Within this patient group, 12 (80%) presented with high and 3 (20%) with low intraocular pressure. Disease severity and age of onset showed a broad range. CONCLUSIONS. The occurrence of several rare putative diseasecausing variants in patients with glaucoma suggests that WDR36 may be a minor disease-causing gene in glaucoma, at least in the German population. The large variability in WDR36, though, requires functional validation of these variants, once its function is characterized.UCR::Vicerrectoría de Investigación::Unidades de Investigación::Ciencias Básicas::Centro de Investigación en Biología Celular y Molecular (CIBCM)UCR::Vicerrectoría de Docencia::Ciencias Básicas::Facultad de Ciencias::Escuela de Biologí

    Heterozygous Loss-of-Function Variants in CYP1B1 Predispose to Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma

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    Purpose.: Although primary congenital glaucoma (PCG)–associated CYP1B1 mutations in the heterozygous state have been evaluated for association with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) in several small studies, their contribution to the occurrence of POAG is still controversial. The present study was conducted to determine whether heterozygous functionally characterized CYP1B1 mutations are associated with the disease in a large cohort of German patients with POAG. Methods.: The frequency of CYP1B1 variants on direct sequencing of the entire coding region was compared in 399 unrelated German patients with POAG (270, POAG; 47, JOAG; and 82, NTG) and 376 control subjects without any signs of glaucoma on ophthalmic examination. In vitro functional assays were performed and relative enzymatic activity of the CYP1B1 variants embedded in their respective background haplotypes and not previously unambiguously classified were determined, to assess their possible causative role. Results.: Apart from known polymorphic variants, 11 amino acid substitutions in CYP1B1 reported before, both in PCG and POAG cases, were identified. After in vitro functional assay, variants P52L and R368H showed marked reduction of activity, confirming their role as loss-of-function mutations similar to previously determined variants G61E, N203S, and G329V. In contrast, variants G168D, A443G, and A465V showed no relevant effects and were thus classified as polymorphisms. Overall, seven functionally impaired variants were present in 13 (3.6%) patients and in 1 (0.2%) control subject (P = 0.002, OR = 5.4). Reanalysis of previous studies reporting CYP1B1 mutations in patients with POAG based on updated functional validation showed a significant excess of carriers among patients compared to controls (OR = 3.85; P = 2.3 × 10−7). Conclusions.: Heterozygous CYP1B1 mutations with absent or reduced relative enzymatic activity can be considered a risk factor for POAG.German Research Foundation/[WE1259/14-3]/DFG/GermanyGerman Research Foundation/[SFB-539]/DFG/GermanyUCR::Vicerrectoría de Investigación::Unidades de Investigación::Ciencias Básicas::Centro de Investigación en Biología Celular y Molecular (CIBCM

    Common genetic determinants of intraocular pressure and primary open-angle Glaucoma

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    10.1371/journal.pgen.1002611PLoS Genetics85

    Germany: Longitudinal analysis of intraocular pressure in healthy eyes

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    Purpose: The knowledge of physiology of intraocular pressure (IOP) is important for the interpretation of pathophysiological alterations of IOP in glaucoma patients. Thus, the purpose of this study was a retrospective analysis of follow-up data of IOP in normal subjects in Germany. Methods: A retrospective analysis of IOP data of 112 eyes of 112 normal subjects (age: 18–81 years) of the Erlangen Glaucoma Registry (NCT00494923; ISSN 219-5008, CS-2011) was performed. Data of normal subjects with annual visits (with a number of 2–18) were analyzed. IOP was measured by Goldmann applanation tonometry at each visit in the morning. After IOP correction by the Dresdner correction table (according to the central corneal thickness, CCT), different statistical models were applied taking in account the influence of age and gender. Results: A significant influence of age and gender was observed on CCT (p < 0.001). Additionally, age affected IOP (p = 0.0018), yet, gender did not show any dependency on IOP. A significant age effect was observed on IOPcorr without differences between female and male. Quantile analysis yielded a significant change of the 0.25 percentile of IOP (p < 0.0001) and a slightly change for the 0.75 percentile of IOP (p = 0.05) over time in women. In men, a significant change was seen for the 0.5 percentile of IOP over time (p = 0.04). Conclusion: An age-dependency on CCT and IOP was observed in the German population. Additionally, gender affected CCT, yet not IOP

    OCT-Angiography: Mydriatic phenylephrine and tropicamide do not influence retinal microvasculature in macula and peripapillary region

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    Purpose Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A) enables visualization of retinal microcirculation. As a potential influence of mydriatic eye drops on retinal vessel density (VD) was proposed, the purpose of the present study was to investigate an influence of 5% phenylephrine and 0.5% tropicamide on macula and peripapillary VD. Methods 30 eyes of 30 healthy persons were measured by en face OCT-A (Spectralis OCT II, Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg). Scans of the macula (12 sectors, region of interest, ROI: 6.10 mm2) and peripapillary region (4 sectors, ROI: 2.67 mm2) were performed before (-) and 30 minutes after application of phenylephrine 5% and tropicamide 0.5% (+) eye drops (scan size was 8.41 mm2). Macula microcirculation was quantified in 3 retinal layers (superficial vascular plexus (SVP), deep capillary plexus (DCP), intermediate capillary plexus (ICP)). Data analysis was performed with the Erlangen-Angio-Tool. Results (I) Mean VD was 33.03±2.3 (SVP), 23.53±2.9 (ICP) and 25.48±4.2 (DCP) before and 33.12±2.4 (SVP), 23.74±2.9 (ICP) and 25.82±4.0 (DCP) with mydriasis respectively. (II) Sectorial analysis: 30.63±2.9–34.45±2.9 (-) and 31.04±2.9–34.34±2.7 (+) in SVP; 22.61±2.9–24.93±3.2 (-) and 22.75±2.5–25.20±3.0 (+) in ICP; 24.56±4.7–26.45±3.4 (-) and 25.00±4.1–27.07±3.5 (+) in DCP. (III) Peripapillary region showed a mean VD of 31.82±3.8 before and 31.59±4.3 after mydriasis. Sectorial analysis of VD yielded a range of 31.04±4.1–32.65±3.8 (-) and 30.98±4.4–31.89±4.1 (+). (IV) Macula and peripapillary VD were not different before and after mydriasis (p>0.05). Conclusion Pharmacologic mydriasis did not influence retinal microcirculation in macula and peripapillary region enabling OCT-A scans with enhanced imaging process and scan quality

    APSified OCT-angiography analysis: Macula vessel density in healthy eyes during office hours.

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    PurposeOptical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A) can visualize retinal capillary microcirculation non-invasively. In order to investigate potential factors influencing OCT-A diagnostics, the aim of the present study was to determine circadian changes in macular vessel density (VD) in healthy adults during office hours, considering axial length (AL) and subfoveal choroidal thickness (CT).MethodsIn the prospective study 30 eyes of 30 healthy subjects (mean age 28.7 ± 11.8, range 19-60 years) were recruited who underwent repeated measurements of AL, subfoveal CT and three-layer macula VD (superficial vascular plexus (SVP), intermediate capillary plexus (ICP) and deep capillary plexus (DCP)) on a single day at three predetermined timepoints (9 AM, 3 PM, and 9 PM). For better intra- and interindividual scan comparability, the new Anatomic Positioning System function (APS, part of Glaucoma Module Premium Edition [GMPE], Heidelberg Engineering, Germany) allowing analysis of identical retinal areas, was used for quantitative OCT-A analysis.ResultsOverall mean macula VD was unchanged during office hours in SVP, ICP and DCP, respectively (p>0.05). In addition, AL and CT showed no statistically significant changes over time (p>0.05). Rather, a large interindividual variance of VD with different peak time was observed. Contrary to the overall data, sectorial VD changed in dependency of office hours in all layers with an increase of VD in SVP between 9 AM and 9 PM (p = 0.003), in ICP between 3 PM and 9 PM (p = 0.000), in DCP between 9 AM and 9 PM (p = 0.048), and 3 PM and 9 PM (p = 0.000), respectively.ConclusionOverall mean macula VD, subfoveal CT and AL tended not to show statistically significant changes over time in this cohort, whereas a regional analysis of VD did. Therefore, a circadian influence on capillary microcirculation should be kept in mind. Moreover, the results highlight the importance of a more detailed analysis of VD in different sectors and different vascular layers. In addition, the pattern of diurnal variation could vary inter-individually, thus a patient-specific fluctuation pattern would need to be considered when evaluating these parameters in clinical practice
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