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. 1994;88(1):89-97.
doi: 10.1007/BF01203705.

Selective effects of retinal dopamine depletion on partial ischemia-induced electroretinographic hyperresponses in rabbits

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Selective effects of retinal dopamine depletion on partial ischemia-induced electroretinographic hyperresponses in rabbits

G Lafond et al. Doc Ophthalmol. 1994.

Abstract

The interaction of retinal dopamine depletion and partial ischemia on the a- and b-wave amplitudes and implicit times of the electroretinogram was examined in adult pigmented rabbits. Seven days after 6-hydroxydopamine treatment, which resulted in a depletion of the amine, partial retinal ischemia was induced by raising the intraocular pressure. As expected, moderate elevation of intraocular pressure produced increases in both a- and b-wave amplitudes. Amplitude hyperresponses were significantly reduced in dopamine-depleted retinas. These reductions were more prominent with relatively lower intensities. However, response delays were not shortened but lengthened by 6-hydroxydopamine pretreatment. Together, these results point to a selective role of dopamine in partial retinal ischemia induced by moderate elevation of intraocular pressure in rabbits.

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