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Blood-retinal barrier
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Blood-retinal_barrier" .
The blood-retinal barrier , or the BRB, is part of the blood-ocular barrier that consists of cells that are joined tightly together in order to prevent certain substances from entering the tissue of the retina.[1] It consists of non-fenestrated capillaries of the retinal circulation and tight-junctions between retinal epithelial cells preventing passage of large molecules from choriocapillaris into the retina . The blood retinal barrier has two components: the retinal vascular endothelium and the retinal pigment epithelium .[2] Retinal blood vessels that are similar to cerebral blood vessels maintain the inner blood-ocular barrier. This physiological barrier comprises a single layer of non-fenestrated endothelial cells , which have tight junctions . These junctions are impervious to tracer , so many substances can impact the metabolism of the eyeball . The retinal pigment epithelium maintains the outer blood-retinal barrier.[3]
Diabetic retinopathy , eye damage that frequently occurs as a result of diabetes , is related to the breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier.[4] The barrier becomes more leaky in patients with diabetic retinopathy.[5]
Animal models have shown that the blood-retinal barrier becomes more permeable to substances in hypertensive animals (those with high blood pressure ).[6]
See also
References
^ Biologyonline.org. Blood-retinal barrier . Retrieved on July 19 , 2007 .
^ Vinores SA. 1995. Assessment of blood-retinal barrier integrity. Histology and Histopathology , Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages 141-154. PMID 7756735 . Retrieved on July 19 , 2007 .
^ Pardianto G et al. 2005. Blood-retinal-barrier. Mimbar Ilmiah Oftalmologi Indonesia . Volume 2, Pages 68-69.
^ Azza B. El-Remessy, Mohamed Al-Shabrawey, Yousuf Khalifa, Nai-Tse Tsai, Ruth B. Caldwell and Gregory I. Liou. 2006. Neuroprotective and Blood-Retinal Barrier-Preserving Effects of Cannabidiol in Experimental Diabetes. American Journal of Pathology , Volume 168, Pages 235-244. Retrieved on July 19 , 2007 .
^ Lobo CL, Bernardes RC, and Cunha-Vaz JG. 2000. Alterations of the Blood-Retinal Barrier and Retinal Thickness in Preclinical Retinopathy in Subjects With Type 2 Diabetes. Archives in Ophthalmology , Volume 118, Pages 1364-1369. Retrieved on July 19 , 2007 .
^ S Lightman, E Rechthand, C Latker, A Palestine and S Rapoport. Assessment of the permeability of the blood-retinal barrier in hypertensive rats. Hypertension , Volume 10, Pages 390-395. Retrieved on July 19 , 2007 .
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