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Studies of the retinal capillaries in relation to diabetic and other retinopathies

Norman Ashton
- 01 Sep 1963 - 
- Vol. 47, Iss: 9, pp 521-538
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TLDR
Three of the most important manifestations of diabetic retinopathy will be discussed, namely endothelial proliferation, capillary microaneurysms, and capillary closure.
Abstract
ONLY 10 years ago laboratory research on the problem of diabetic retinopathy was confined to a few investigators working in isolated ophthalmological centres, but to-day it is attracting widespread attention from many different quarters and the literature is alive with new observations and new theories. It is therefore timely to consider to what extent the various pathological features of the disease may be specific for diabetes or simply fundamental reactions to non-specific injury. I should like to consider some recent findings from my own and other laboratories which throw further light on normal and abnormal reactions of retinal capillaries, and to discuss their possible relation to the pathological picture of diabetic retinopathy and to some of the theories of pathogenesis which have been advanced. Three of its most important manifestations will be discussed, namely endothelial proliferation, capillary microaneurysms, and capillary closure. The question of venous dilatation is a clinical one, and there is still not complete agreement that it is an early sign of diabetic retinopathy, and I shall not therefore deal with it as a pathological entity. Everyone would surely agree that the exudates are of only secondary importance. Before discussing these three pathological manifestations, a few comments will be made on our technical methods and upon the normal retinal capillaries.

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Citations
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The polyol pathway as a mechanism for diabetic retinopathy: attractive, elusive, and resilient.

TL;DR: Only new drugs that inhibit aldose reductase with higher efficacy and safety than older drugs will make possible to learn if the resilience of the polyol pathway means that it has a role in human diabetic retinopathy that should not have gone undiscovered.
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Elevated γ-Aminobutyric Acid, Glutamate, and Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Levels in the Vitreous of Patients With Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy

TL;DR: The relative levels of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamate, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the vitreous of nondiabetic and diabetic patients were examined in this paper.
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Pericytes: Pluripotent Cells of the Blood Brain Barrier

TL;DR: Evidence that pericytes are stem cells derived from historical work and from more recent literature is considered, and a number of misconceptions about the pericyte are attempted to dispel that has lead to confusion in the literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diabetic Choroidopathy: Light and Electron Microscopic Observations of Seven Cases

TL;DR: Choroidal vasculopathy in diabetes mellitus is similar to much of what has been described in other tissues of the eye and body, and suggests an important role in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy since the outer retinal layers are largely dependent on the choroid for their nutrition and oxygenation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Retinal vascular patterns. IV. Diabetic retinopathy.

TL;DR: Noteworthy has been the predominant localization of the diabetic microaneurysms in the central and paracentral regions, their random distribution, and their association with punctate hemorrhages and "exudates" in the deep retina.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies of retinal vascular patterns. I. Normal architecture.

TL;DR: Flat preparations of the retina afford an unusually favorable opportunity to study blood vessel architecture (Ballantyne and Lowenstein 1 ).