Publication | Open Access
A brief photochemically induced oxidative insult causes irreversible lens damage and cataract I. Transparency and epithelial cell layer
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Citations
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References
1995
Year
Short-term Photochemical InsultPhotochemistryOphthalmologyMedicineExperimental OphthalmologyCataractEpithelial Cell LayerPhototoxicityOcular TissueCataract I. TransparencyEpithelial Cell DamageToxicologyOcular PathologyIrreversible Lens DamageCell BiologyRedox BiologyPhotochemical InsultOxidative Stress
Short-term photochemical insult of cultured rat lenses caused by the generation of H2O2, O2.− and OH. was found to lead to rapid irreversible damage to the epithelial cell layer. This irreversible damage was measured by Trypan blue staining, terminal deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase labeling, DNA laddering and morphological analyses. There appears to be an inverse relationship between the period of photochemical insult and the post-insult time required to observe epithelial cell damage. Insulting periods of a few hours require post-insult intervals of days to observe significant cell damage and weeks before complete cortical cataracts are found. Epithelial cell damage precedes the loss of transparency.
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