Neuroprotection In A Model Of Chronic Ocular Hypertension
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$264,221.00
Summary
Damage can occur to nervous tissues like the retina and brain when there is a reduction in the blood supply. This can occur in the eye disease, glaucoma, in which the pressure inside the eye is elevated. This serious condition often results in blindness. Much of the neuronal damage is thought to be due to the release of an excess of glutamate. Glutamate is a chemical (neurotransmitter) that nerves use to communicate with each other, but it is toxic to nerves when present at high concentrations. ....Damage can occur to nervous tissues like the retina and brain when there is a reduction in the blood supply. This can occur in the eye disease, glaucoma, in which the pressure inside the eye is elevated. This serious condition often results in blindness. Much of the neuronal damage is thought to be due to the release of an excess of glutamate. Glutamate is a chemical (neurotransmitter) that nerves use to communicate with each other, but it is toxic to nerves when present at high concentrations. This project will utilise a new model of glaucoma to investigate the mechanisms that regulate the concentration of glutamate in the retina. If these mechanisms could be made to work more efficiently, they may prevent the build-up of the glutamate and therefore prevent damage to the nerve cells. Understanding these mechanisms will aid in the development of an effective treatment to prevent visual loss in the 150,000 Australians who suffer from glaucoma.Read moreRead less
Properties Of Human Photoreceptors Measured Using A Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscope To Illuminate And Image The Retina
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$352,000.00
Summary
Vision begins with the detection of light by the rod and cone photoreceptors in the retina lining the interior of the eye. Although much is already known about the way that light is detected and the signals are processed, a great deal remains to be learned. Some of the outstanding questions could be answered using modifications to a relatively new instrument called a scanning laser ophthalmoscope (SLO) which provides images of the interior of the eye. The aims of this project are to develop a mo ....Vision begins with the detection of light by the rod and cone photoreceptors in the retina lining the interior of the eye. Although much is already known about the way that light is detected and the signals are processed, a great deal remains to be learned. Some of the outstanding questions could be answered using modifications to a relatively new instrument called a scanning laser ophthalmoscope (SLO) which provides images of the interior of the eye. The aims of this project are to develop a modified SLO, which is able to measure the levels of visual pigment (rhodopsin) in the living eye, which is also able to deliver visual stimuli to the eye, and which finally is extended to use adaptive optics so that it can image and excite individual cone photoreceptors. Using this device, we will be able to measure the regeneration of visual pigment following exposures to intense illumination, to help explain the slow recovery of visual sensitivity after intense light. We will also be able to measure the electroretinogram (ERG) from localized retinal areas, to investigate how the properties of the photoreceptor cells vary across the retina. And finally we will be able not only to visualize the individual tiny cone photoreceptors, but also to stimulate them selectively, so that we can determine the responses of the different classes of cone (red-, green-, and blue-sensitive cones) in the living human eye.Read moreRead less