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Publication : Ocular dysfunction in a mouse model of chronic gut inflammation.

First Author  Watts MN Year  2013
Journal  Inflamm Bowel Dis Volume  19
Issue  10 Pages  2091-7
PubMed ID  23899539 Mgi Jnum  J:318128
Mgi Id  MGI:6858358 Doi  10.1097/MIB.0b013e318295fdb3
Citation  Watts MN, et al. (2013) Ocular dysfunction in a mouse model of chronic gut inflammation. Inflamm Bowel Dis 19(10):2091-7
abstractText  BACKGROUND: Ocular disease is known widely to occur in a subset of patients experiencing inflammatory bowel diseases. Although this extraintestinal manifestation has been recognized for a number of years, the pathogenetic mechanisms responsible for this distant organ inflammatory response are unknown. METHODS: In the current study, we used a T-cell transfer model of chronic colitis in mice in which we quantified colonic inflammation, ocular function (electroretinography), ocular blood flow (intravital microscopy of the retina), intraocular pressure, and retinal hypoxia. RESULTS: Ocular function in colitic mice was significantly impaired, with decreases in retinal b-wave amplitudes and oscillatory potentials. Moreover, retinal a waves and oscillatory potentials were delayed. Retinal blood flow was significantly reduced in the colitic mice, and this decrease in perfusion coupled with significant decreases in hematocrit would decrease oxygen delivery to the eye. Accordingly, mice with severe colitis showed increased levels of immunostaining for the hypoxia-dependent probe pimonidazole. Finally, intraocular pressures were found to be reduced in the colitic mice. CONCLUSIONS: Ocular disease occurs in a mouse model of chronic colitis, with retinal dysfunction seeming to be related to insufficient perfusion and oxygen delivery.
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