Advances in retinal ganglion cell imaging

被引:37
|
作者
Balendra, S. I. [1 ]
Normando, E. M. [1 ,2 ]
Bloom, P. A. [2 ]
Cordeiro, M. F. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] UCL Inst Ophthalmol, Glaucoma & Retinal Neurodegenerat Grp, Dept Visual Neurosci, London EC1V 9EL, England
[2] Imperial Coll Healthcare Trust, ICORG, Western Eye Hosp, London, England
关键词
OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY; IN-VIVO; ADAPTIVE-OPTICS; COMPUTERIZED ANALYSIS; LONGITUDINAL PROFILE; FLUORESCENT PEPTIDE; GAMMA-SYNUCLEIN; CHOLERA-TOXIN; GLAUCOMA; APOPTOSIS;
D O I
10.1038/eye.2015.154
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
Glaucoma is one of the leading causes of blindness worldwide and will affect 79.6 million people worldwide by 2020. It is caused by the progressive loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), predominantly via apoptosis, within the retinal nerve fibre layer and the corresponding loss of axons of the optic nerve head. One of its most devastating features is its late diagnosis and the resulting irreversible visual loss that is often predictable. Current diagnostic tools require significant RGC or functional visual field loss before the threshold for detection of glaucoma may be reached. To propel the efficacy of therapeutics in glaucoma, an earlier diagnostic tool is required. Recent advances in retinal imaging, including optical coherence tomography, confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy, and adaptive optics, have propelled both glaucoma research and clinical diagnostics and therapeutics. However, an ideal imaging technique to diagnose and monitor glaucoma would image RGCs non-invasively with high specificity and sensitivity in vivo. It may confirm the presence of healthy RGCs, such as in transgenic models or retrograde labelling, or detect subtle changes in the number of unhealthy or apoptotic RGCs, such as detection of apoptosing retinal cells (DARC). Although many of these advances have not yet been introduced to the clinical arena, their successes in animal studies are enthralling. This review will illustrate the challenges of imaging RGCs, the main retinal imaging modalities, the in vivo techniques to augment these as specific RGC-imaging tools and their potential for translation to the glaucoma clinic.
引用
收藏
页码:1260 / 1269
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Proteomic analysis of retinal ganglion cells: Toward retinal ganglion cell protein mapping
    Yang, XJ
    Tezel, G
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2005, 46
  • [22] Assessing retinal ganglion cell damage
    Smith, C. A.
    Vianna, J. R.
    Chauhan, B. C.
    EYE, 2017, 31 (02) : 209 - 217
  • [23] Characterisation of a retinal ganglion cell promoter
    Millington-Ward, S.
    Chadderton, N.
    Palfi, A.
    Berkeley, M.
    Hanlon, K. S.
    Humphries, P.
    Kenna, P. F.
    Farrar, G. J.
    HUMAN GENE THERAPY, 2019, 30 (08) : A10 - A10
  • [24] The autoregulation of retinal ganglion cell number
    González-Hoyuela, M
    Barbas, JA
    Rodríguez-Tébar, A
    DEVELOPMENT, 2001, 128 (01): : 117 - 124
  • [25] Injury mechanisms of retinal ganglion cell
    Yao, Jing
    Xu, Ge-Zhi
    Fudan University Journal of Medical Sciences, 2004, 31 (01) : 107 - 110
  • [26] Targeting retinal ganglion cell recovery
    Crowston, J. G.
    Fahy, E. T.
    Fry, L.
    Trounce, I. A.
    van Wijngaarden, P.
    Petrou, S.
    Chrysostomou, V.
    EYE, 2017, 31 (02) : 196 - 198
  • [27] Retinal ganglion cell shrinkage in glaucoma
    Morgan, JE
    JOURNAL OF GLAUCOMA, 2002, 11 (04) : 365 - 370
  • [28] Targeting retinal ganglion cell recovery
    J G Crowston
    E T Fahy
    L Fry
    I A Trounce
    P van Wijngaarden
    S Petrou
    V Chrysostomou
    Eye, 2017, 31 : 196 - 198
  • [29] REFRACTING A SINGLE RETINAL GANGLION CELL
    HILL, RM
    IKEDA, H
    ARCHIVES OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, 1971, 85 (05) : 592 - &
  • [30] Dating behavior of the retinal ganglion cell
    Goodhill, GJ
    NEURON, 2000, 25 (03) : 501 - 503