Quantitative analysis of the suppressive effect on the light rise of the hypertonic solution |
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Authors: | Kenji Wakabayashi Kazuo Kawasaki Daizo Yonemura Kiyohiko Yamazaki |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Ophthalmology, Kanazawa University School of Medicine, 13-1, Takaramachi, 920 Kanazawa Ishikawa, Japan |
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Abstract: | We previously reported the hyperosmolarity response (a decrease of the ocular standing potential by hyperosmolarity) as a new clinical test of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) activity. In the present study a hypertonic solution (Fructmanit, 1.4 × 103 m0sm/1) was intravenously injected for 20 min in proportion to a subject's total blood volume (TBV). At the injection speed of 5, 10, and 15% of the subjects' TBV per hour the mean amplitude of the hyperosmolarity response in normal subjects was 19.7, 30.1 and 36.4% respectively. The amplitude of the hyperosmolarity response depends on the logarithm of the dose of the hypertonic solution within the range of the dose tested.We previously found that hyperosmolarity suppresses the light rise. The present study investigated this suppressive effect in a quantitative manner. The light rise (a full-field illumination of 1.2 × 103 cdl/m2) was dose-dependently suppressed by Fructmanit. The mean of the light rise to dark trough ratio in normal subjects was 1.81 with no osmotic stress, and 1.64, 1.41 and 1.29 respectively at the injection speeds of 5, 10, and 15%. The suppression of the light rise by hyperosmolarity is compatible with the view that the hyperosmolarity response and the light rise share the basal membrane of the RPE as the main site of their generation. |
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Keywords: | electrooculogram hyperosmolarity light rise |
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