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Transl Vis Sci Technol ; 4(4): 5, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26290776

RESUMO

PURPOSE: To investigate the integration of subretinal implants containing full-depth perforations of various widths with rat and pig retina across weeks of implantation. METHODS: In transgenic P23H rhodopsin line 1 (TgP23H-1) rats and wild-type (WT) pigs, we examined four subretinal implant designs: solid inactive polymer arrays (IPA), IPAs with 5- or 10-µm wide perforations, and active bipolar photovoltaic arrays (bPVA) with 5-µm perforations. We surgically placed the implants into the subretinal space using an external approach in rats or a vitreoretinal approach in pigs. Implant placement in the subretinal space was verified with optical coherence tomography and retinal perfusion was characterized with fluorescein angiography. Rats were sacrificed 8 or 16 weeks post-implantation (wpi) and pigs 2, 4, or 8 wpi, and retinas evaluated at the light microscopic level. RESULTS: Regardless of implant design, retinas of both species showed normal vasculature. In TgP23H-1 retinas implanted with 10-µm perforated IPAs, inner nuclear layer (INL) cells migrated through the perforations by 8 wpi, resulting in significant INL thinning by 16 wpi. Additionally, these retinas showed greater pseudo-rosette formation and fibrosis compared with retinas with solid or 5-µm perforated IPAs. TgP23H-1 retinas with bPVAs showed similar INL migration to retinas with 5-µm perforated IPAs, with less fibrosis and rosette formation. WT pig retina with perforated IPAs maintained photoreceptors, showed no migration, and less pseudo-rosette formation, but more fibrosis compared with implanted TgP23H-1 rat retinas. CONCLUSIONS: In retinas with photoreceptor degeneration, solid implants, or those with 5-µm perforations lead to the best biocompatibility.

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