Talc retinopathy in primates: a model of ischemic retinopathy. II. A histopathologic study
N. Kaga, M. O. Tso, L. M. Jampol, T. Setogawa and K. R. Rednam
Experiment talc retinopathy was produced in four adult rhesus monkeys by
biweekly intravenous injections of talc for 31/2 to ten months and was
studied by retinal vascular flat preparations and by light microscopy. Talc
particles were lodged in the walls of the precapillary arterioles and
capillaries, producing focal occlusion of retinal and choroidal
capillaries. The pericyte-endothelial cell ratio was 1:0.77 in the
posterior pole and 1:0.53 in the retinal periphery. The horseradish
peroxidase study showed leakage of tracer from the retinal vasculature into
the extracellular interstitial space, but the barrier of the retinal
pigment epithelium was intact. Microinfarcts produced small cystoid spaces
in the outer plexiform layer, inner nuclear layer, and ganglion cell layer
of the macula. Cytoid bodies and macrophages were scattered in the retina.
No retinal or vitreal neovascularization was observed.