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Showing posts with label Retina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Retina. Show all posts

Monday, 27 March 2023

World's leading cause of blindness could be treated with a new fish oil pill, study claims

 A fish oil supplement may hold the key to treating one of the world's leading cause of blindness, a study suggests.

  • Researchers developed a new kind of omega-3 fatty acid able to reach the retina
  • The supplement increased DHA in mice subjects’ retinas, reducing vision harms
  • Omega-3s, commonly found in fish oils, benefit cognition, vision and stiff joints  

A fish oil supplement may hold the key to treating one of the world's leading cause of blindness, a study suggests.

Researchers have created a new form of omega-3 fatty acid that is capable of crossing into the eye’s retina to ward off vision loss related to Alzheimer’s, diabetes, and other diseases.

In a study on mice, the supplement was able to first be absorbed from the intestine into the bloodstream and then cross from the bloodstream into the retina. This prevented age related macular degeneration (AMD).

The mice that were fed the new type of supplement showed nearly 100 percent improvement after six months in the amount of crucial omega-3 known as DHA in their retinas. 

The lab-made version of the omega-3 known as docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) was able to be absorbed from the intestine into the bloodstream and then cross from the bloodstream into the retina, unlike the type that makes up common fish oil supplements currently on the market. 


The omega-3 the team developed could be packaged in a dietary supplement much like the ones that line pharmacy shelves, potentially helping more than 20 million Americans with vision problems liked to aging and diabetes

Scientists have been investigating for years whether dietary intake of omega-3 fatty acids can slow vision loss, primarily AMD, a common cause of severe vision loss in older people.

There are currently no treatments for AMD, and doctors will be relegated to provide elderly patients with glasses or other vision aids.

The substance, commonly found in fish and krill oil supplements typically comes in a form called triacylglycerol (TAG) DHA which cannot travel from the bloodstream into the retina.

Professor Sugasini Dhavamani in the Department of Medicine at the University of Illinois at Chicago and lead author of the report said: ‘Dietary LPC-DHA is enormously superior to TAG-DHA in enriching retinal DHA and could be potentially beneficial for various retinopathies in patients.’

‘This approach provides a novel therapeutic approach for the prevention or mitigation of retinal dysfunction associated with Alzheimer’s disease and diabetes.’

Studies of the specific omega 3 acid in humans have yet to begin. But the promising early results suggest that more than 23 million people – the total number of Americans with either retinopathy linked to diabetes or age-related macular degeneration – could benefit from a newly formulated dietary supplement.

People with Alzheimer’s disease, as well as those with diabetes, a group of rare eye diseases called retinitis pigmentosa, age-related macular degeneration, and peroxisomal disorders that affect the metabolism often have abnormally low levels of retinal DHA, resulting in visual impairments.

While omega-3s come in supplement form, they are also found naturally in many foods including salmon and other fish, leafy vegetables, wholewheat bread and walnuts. 

The researchers tested their LPC-DHA supplement in mice bred to exhibit processes similar to those found in early-onset Alzheimer’s disease. 

After six months, mice that were fed LPC-DHA daily showed a 96 percent improvement in retinal DHA content as well as preserved retinal structure and function. 

Meanwhile, TAG-DHA supplements had no effect on retinal DHA levels or function. 

In healthy eyes, DHA is concentrated in the retina, where it helps maintain photoreceptors, the cells that convert light into signals that are sent to the brain. Healthy levels of DHA in the retinas protect against damage from bright light exposure and oxidative stress.

Recent research has also shown that people with a higher blood DHA level have higher protection against Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.

Professor Dhavamani said: ‘Increasing the retinal DHA at clinically feasible doses has not been possible until now because of the specificity of the blood–retinal barrier that is incompatible with the specificity of the intestinal barrier.

‘This study uses the novel approach of dietary LPC-DHA that overcomes both intestinal and blood–retinal barriers and improves retinal function.’

The dosage of their LPC-DHA was equivalent to about 250 to 500 milligrams of omega-3 fatty acids per day in humans, roughly the same range recommended by the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association.


Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Simple eye test reveals brain health

By Kathleen Blanchard RN on March 17, 2012 - 10:37am for eMaxHealth

Retinopathy could signal later cognitive decline from brain vessel disease.People who have damage to the small vessels in the eye were found in a study to have problems with memory and thinking. Research findings published in the online issue of Neurology links damage to the retina of the eye, or retinopathy, to brain disease

Study author Mary Haan, DrPH, MPH, of the University of California, San Francisco said in a press release, “This could be very useful if a simple eye screening could give us an early indication that people might be at risk of problems with their brain health and functioning.

The researchers tested 511 women whose average age was 69. Women who performed poorly on memory tests were also found to have small changes in the blood vessels of the eyes associated with retinopathy that had not yet caused any vision problems.

The results come from data included in the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study and the Site Examination study, two ancillary studies of the Women’s Health Initiative Clinical Trial of Hormone Therapy.

Among the 511 women tested, 39 were diagnosed with retinopathy. Specifically, they had more difficulty remembering words 5 minutes after hearing them. They also had more damage in the blood vessels of the brain in addition to thickening in the white matter tacks of the brain that transmit signals.

Eye exam could reveal other diseases


What the study means is that it pays to get your eye exam. The researchers also suggest changes in the retina of the eye could signal other diseases such as type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure before symptoms develop.

Checking the health of the blood vessels that supply the retina of the eye regularly can allow patients to know when lifestyle interventions or medications are needed to prevent other chronic illnesses.

“Lots of people who are pre-diabetic or pre-hypertensive develop retinopathy,” said the lead author of the Haan in a press release. “Early intervention might reduce the progression to full onset diabetes or hypertension.”

Hahn also said the women did not have brain atrophy which can signal early Alzheimer’s disease. The finding means retinopathy is a marker of disease of the brain’s blood vessels.

In a commentary to the study, published March 14, 2012 in the online edition of the journal Neurology,Rebecca F. Gottesman, MD, PhD, from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, and Ge Li, MD, PhD, from University of Washington PhD, say this study "adds to the growing evidence of a causal association of small vessel disease and cognition, but most importantly, it further validates retinopathy as an early marker for brain small vessel disease in living persons."

A simple eye test that is relatively inexpensive can reveal much about brain health, validated in this study. Small changes in the blood vessels that supply the retina of the eye, known as retinopathy, were associated with poor memory in the women who participated in the investigation.

Neurology. 2012;78:936-937, 942-949. Abstract Editorial
"Cognitive function and retinal and ischemic brain changes
The Women's Health Initiative
March 12, 2012
M. Haan, et al
doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e31824d9655

Image credit: Morguefile

http://www.emaxhealth.com/1020/simple-eye-test-reveals-brain-health