Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Retinal sheet transplants tested in cats with inherited retinal
By Seiler, Magdalene J et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2009·Department of Ophthalmology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Functional and structural assessment of retinal sheet allograft transplantation in feline hereditary retinal degeneration.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of four Abyssinian cats with hereditary retinal degeneration underwent surgery to receive sheets of fetal retinal tissue in hopes of restoring vision. After four months, two of the cats showed good integration of the transplant, with some normal connections forming between the new tissue and their existing retina, but unfortunately, none of the cats experienced any improvement in their vision. The study suggests that while the transplants can integrate well, they did not lead to functional recovery in these cats. More research is needed to see if this treatment could help cats with more advanced retinal degeneration.
People also search for: cat retinal degeneration treatment · Abyssinian cat vision loss · feline retinal transplant results
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate whether sheets of fetal retinal allografts can integrate into the dystrophic Abyssinian cat retina with progressive rod cone degeneration. METHODS: Fetal retinal sheets (cat gestational day 42), incubated with BDNF microspheres, were transplanted to the subretinal space of four cats at an early disease stage. Cats were studied by fundus examinations, bilateral full-field flash ERGs, and indocyanine green and fluorescein angiograms up to 4 months following surgery. E42 donor and transplanted eyes were analyzed by histology and immunohistochemistry for retinal markers. RESULTS: Funduscopy and angiography showed good integration of the transplants in two of four cats, including extension of host blood vessels into the transplant and some scarring in the host. In these two, transplants were found in the subretinal space with laminated areas, with photoreceptor outer segments in normal contacts with the host retinal pigment epithelium. In some areas, transplants appeared to be well-integrated within the host neural retina. Neither of these two cats showed functional improvement in ERGs. In the other two cats, only remnants of donor tissue were left. Transplants stained for all investigated cellular markers. No PKC immunoreactivity was detected in the fetal donor retina at E42, but developed in the 4-month-old grafts. CONCLUSIONS: Fetal sheet transplants can integrate well within a degenerating cat retina and develop good lamination of photoreceptors. Functional improvement was not demonstrated by ERG in cats with well-laminated grafts. Transplants need to be further evaluated in cat host retinas with a more advanced retinal degeneration using longer follow-up times.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19392875/