Rabbit rubeosis iridis induced by intravitreal latex-derived angiogenic fraction.

Journal: Current Eye Research
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To describe the presence of iris neovascularization in a rabbit-model of retinal neovascularization induced by the intravitreal injection of latex-derived angiogenic fraction microspheres (LAF).

Methods: Eight New Zealand rabbits received one intravitreal injection of PLGA (L-lactide-co-glycolide) microspheres with 50 ug of LAF in the right eye (Group A). Microspheres without the LAF (0.1 ml) were injected in controls (Group B; n = 8). Follow-up with clinical evaluation and iris fluorescein angiography was performed after 4 weeks when eyes were processed for light microscopy.

Results: All eyes from Group A showed significant vascular dilation, conjunctival hyperemia and neovascularization on the iris surface, after LAF injection. No vascular changes were observed in Group B.

Conclusions: The intravitreal injection of microspheres containing the LAF can induce rubeosis iridis in rabbits and could be used as a simple experimental model for iris neovascularization.

Authors
J Paula, R Ribeiro, R Sampaio, R Mendonca, A Haddad, A Tedesco, J Coutinho Netto, H Haendchen, R Jorge