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PURPOSE: To investigate changes in optic nerve head (ONH) circulation, visual evoked potentials (VEPs), and ONH cupping after stimulation of the optic nerve. METHODS: Electrodes were fixed above the optic chiasma in rabbits under general anesthesia. Screw-type electrodes for VEP recording were fixed on the dura. ONH circulation, intraocular pressure (IOP), and blood pressure (BP) were measured after the passage of a current of 0.1 mA for 0.1 second (weak stimulation, 1 mA for ten seconds (moderate), 5 mA for ten seconds (strong), or 25 mA for ten seconds (severe). Normalized blur (NB), indicative of tissue blood flow and velocity, was measured in the ONH after each stimulation, by using a laser speckle circulation analyzer. Changes in VEP and ocular fundus were also recorded. The ratio of cup area (CA) to disc area (DA) was measured before and four weeks after stimulation. After all experiments, the ONH was examined histologically. RESULTS: Weak stimulation increased NB in ONH for ten minutes, whereas strong or severe stimulation significantly decreased NB for a longer time, in a dose-dependent manner. BP showed no significant change, except with severe stimulation. IOP was not significantly changed. VEP amplitude was reduced 30 minutes after strong stimulation. The CA-to-DA ratio was significantly increased four weeks after strong stimulation. In some rabbits, disc hemorrhage occurred, followed by enlargement of disc cupping, with slight gliosis. CONCLUSIONS: Electrical stimulation of the optic nerve changed ONH circulation and VEPs and increased disc cupping. This technique warrants further investigation as an experimental model for normal-tension glaucoma.
Dr T. Sugiyama, Department of Ophthalmology, Osaka Medical College, 2-7 Daigaku-cho, Takatsuki, Osaka, 569-8686, Japan. opt017@poh.osaka-med.ac.jp
1.3 Pathogenesis (Part of: 1 General aspects)