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      Toxic optic neuropathies :

      Current Opinion in Ophthalmology
      Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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          Appraising the brain's energy budget.

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            Oxygen distribution and consumption within the retina in vascularised and avascular retinas and in animal models of retinal disease.

            Maintenance of an adequate oxygen supply to the retina is critical for retinal function. In species with vascularised retinas, such as man, oxygen is delivered to the retina via a combination of the choroidal vascular bed, which lies immediately behind the retina, and the retinal vasculature, which lies within the inner retina. The high-oxygen demands of the retina, and the relatively sparse nature of the retinal vasculature, are thought to contribute to the particular vulnerability of the retina to vascular disease. A large proportion of retinal blindness is associated with diseases having a vascular component, and disrupted oxygen supply to the retina is likely to be a critical factor. Much attention has therefore been directed at determining the intraretinal oxygen environment in healthy and diseased eyes. Measurements of oxygen levels within the retina have largely been restricted to animal studies in which oxygen sensitive microelectrodes can be used to obtain high-resolution measurements of oxygen tension as a function of retinal depth. Such measurements can immediately identify which retinal layers are supplied with oxygen from the different vascular elements. Additionally, in the outer retinal layers, which do not have any intrinsic oxygen sources, the oxygen distribution can be analysed mathematically to quantify the oxygen consumption rate of specific retinal layers. This has revealed a remarkable heterogeneity of oxygen requirements of different components of the outer retina, with the inner segments of the photoreceptors being the dominant oxygen consumers. Since the presence of the retinal vasculature precludes such a simple quantitative analysis of local oxygen consumption within the inner retina, our understanding of the oxygen needs of the inner retinal components is much less complete. Although several lines of evidence suggest that in the more commonly studied species such as cat, pig, and rat, the oxygen demands of the inner retina as a whole is broadly comparable to that of the outer retina, exactly which cell layers within the inner retina have the most stringent oxygen demands is not known. This may be a critical issue if the cell types most at risk from disrupted oxygen supply are to be identified. This paper reviews our current understanding of the oxygen requirements of the inner and outer retina and presents new data and mathematical models which identify three dominant oxygen-consuming layers in the rat retina. These are the inner segments of the photoreceptors, the outer plexiform layer, and the deeper region of the inner plexiform layer. We also address the intriguing question of how the oxygen requirements of the inner retina are met in those species which naturally have a poorly vascularised, or even totally avascular retina. We present measurements of the intraretinal oxygen distribution in two species of laboratory animal possessing such retinas, the rabbit and the guinea pig. The rabbit has a predominantly avascular retina, with only a narrow band of retinal vasculature, and the guinea pig retina is completely avascular. Both these animals demonstrate species adaptations in which the oxygen requirement of their inner retinas are extremely low when compared to that of their outer retinas. This finding both uncovers a remarkable ability of the inner retina in avascular species to function in a low-oxygen environment, and also highlights the dangers of extrapolating findings from avascular retinas to infer metabolic requirements of vascularised retinas. Different species also demonstrate a marked diversity in the manner in which intraretinal oxygen distribution is influenced by increases in systemic oxygen level. In the vascularised rat retina, the inner retinal oxygen increase is muted by a combination of increased oxygen consumption and a reduction of net oxygen delivery from the retinal circulation. The avascular retina of the guinea pig demonstrated a novel and powerful regulatory mechanism that prevents any dramatic rise in choroidal oxygen levels and keeps retinal oxygen levels within the normal physiological range. In contrast, in the avascular regions of the rabbit retina the choroidal oxygen level passively follows the increase in systemic oxygenation, and there is a dramatic rise in oxygen level in all retinal layers. The presence or absence of oxygen-regulating mechanisms may well reflect important survival strategies for the retina which are not yet understood. Intraretinal oxygen measurements in rat models of retinal disease are also presented. We describe how oxygen distribution across the rat retina is influenced by manipulation of systemic blood pressure. We examine the effect of acute and chronic occlusion of the retinal vasculature, and explore the feasibility of meeting the oxygen needs of the ischemic retina from the choroid. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
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              Toxic alcohol ingestions: clinical features, diagnosis, and management.

              Alcohol-related intoxications, including methanol, ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol, and propylene glycol, and alcoholic ketoacidosis can present with a high anion gap metabolic acidosis and increased serum osmolal gap, whereas isopropanol intoxication presents with hyperosmolality alone. The effects of these substances, except for isopropanol and possibly alcoholic ketoacidosis, are due to their metabolites, which can cause metabolic acidosis and cellular dysfunction. Accumulation of the alcohols in the blood can cause an increment in the osmolality, and accumulation of their metabolites can cause an increase in the anion gap and a decrease in serum bicarbonate concentration. The presence of both laboratory abnormalities concurrently is an important diagnostic clue, although either can be absent, depending on the time after exposure when blood is sampled. In addition to metabolic acidosis, acute renal failure and neurologic disease can occur in some of the intoxications. Dialysis to remove the unmetabolized alcohol and possibly the organic acid anion can be helpful in treatment of several of the alcohol-related intoxications. Administration of fomepizole or ethanol to inhibit alcohol dehydrogenase, a critical enzyme in metabolism of the alcohols, is beneficial in treatment of ethylene glycol and methanol intoxication and possibly diethylene glycol and propylene glycol intoxication. Given the potentially high morbidity and mortality of these intoxications, it is important for the clinician to have a high degree of suspicion for these disorders in cases of high anion gap metabolic acidosis, acute renal failure, or unexplained neurologic disease so that treatment can be initiated early.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Current Opinion in Ophthalmology
                Current Opinion in Ophthalmology
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                1040-8738
                2013
                November 2013
                : 24
                : 6
                : 534-539
                Article
                10.1097/ICU.0000000000000001
                452d77a0-2da4-468c-b254-5413b23ceb90
                © 2013
                History

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