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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The time course of retrograde trans-synaptic degeneration following occipital lobe damage in humans.

TLDR
Optical coherence tomography is used to demonstrate for the first time progressive thinning of the retinal nerve fibre layer following occipital lobe/optic radiation damage due to stroke and adds weight to the previous demonstration that this type of degeneration does indeed occur in the human visual system by showing that it can be monitored over time.
Abstract
Following damage to the human post-geniculate visual pathway retrograde trans-synaptic degeneration of the optic nerve fibres occurs. It has been known for some time from investigations carried out in primates that a decline in the number of retinal ganglion cells follows occipital lobectomy. However, this is not detectable in all species studied and whether this occurs in humans was controversial until recent studies that have shown that following lesions of the occipital lobe, the retinal nerve fibre layer thickness measured by optical coherence tomography is reduced and corresponding shrinkage of the optic tract can be demonstrated by magnetic resonance imaging. The time course of the degeneration in humans is, however, unknown. In the present study, we have used optical coherence tomography to demonstrate for the first time progressive thinning of the retinal nerve fibre layer following occipital lobe/optic radiation damage due to stroke. First, in a group of 38 patients the measurement was taken on a single occasion at a known time interval since the stroke, ranging from 6 days to 67 years. Here, a negative straight line relationship (linear regression r  = 0.54, P  < 0.001) was found between nerve fibre layer thickness and elapsed time since injury in log years, giving a rate of decline of 9.08 µm per log year after adjusting for age. This indicates a decelerating rate of loss that differs from the rate of decline found with chronological age in this same group, which shows a steady rate of thinning by 0.4 µm per year ( P =  0.006) after adjusting for duration of the disease. In a second study serial measurements were taken following the acute event in a group of seven patients with homonymous hemianopia; here a negative straight line relationship was found between time and nerve fibre layer thickness in micrometres over a period of data collection beginning at a mean of 36.9 days post-stroke (range 5–112) and ending at a mean of 426.6 days post-stroke (range 170–917). Evidence from clinical observation (funduscopy) suggested that retrograde trans-synaptic degeneration occurred in humans only where the damage to the post-geniculate pathway occurred prenatally. The results reported herein add weight to the previous demonstration that this type of degeneration does indeed occur in the human visual system by showing that it can be monitored over time and hence may provide a model for trans-synaptic degeneration in the human central nervous system.

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References
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Experiments on the Section of the Glossopharyngeal and Hypoglossal Nerves of the Frog, and Observations of the Alterations Produced Thereby in the Structure of Their Primitive Fibres

TL;DR: The object of the present observations is to describe certain alterations which take place in the elementary fibres of the nerve after they have been removed from their connection with the brain or spinal marrow.
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Axon degeneration mechanisms: commonality amid diversity

TL;DR: By understanding how the pathways fit together, this work can combine the knowledge of mechanisms, and potentially also treatment strategies, from different axonal disorders.
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Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro Ophthalmology

TL;DR: The subjects covered in each volume are the Visual Sensory System, Autonomic Nervous System, Ocular Motor System, and Degenerative and Metabolic Diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of Normal Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thickness Measured by Stratus OCT

TL;DR: Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness, as measured by Stratus OCT, varies significantly with age, ethnicity, axial length, and optic disc area, and these variables may need to be taken into account when evaluating patients for diagnosis and follow-up of glaucoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Axonal Change in Minor Head Injury

TL;DR: It is suggested that axonal change is a consistent feature of minor head injury and since these axonal changes occurred without any evidence of focal parenchymal or vascular damage, minor brain injury may ultimately disrupt axons without physically shearing or tearing them.
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