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Free
radicals in cornea may contribute to Fuchs
dystrophy, most common cause of corneal
transplants
Discovery holds promise for future
treatments
February 4, 2011--Scientists have found that
free radicals (unstable molecules that cause
the death of cells as the body ages) may
also cause the damage in the eyes of
patients with Fuchs Endothelial Corneal
Dystrophy (FECD), a hereditary disease that
is one of the most common reasons for
corneal transplants worldwide.
The finding, published in the November 2010 American
Journal of Pathology, holds promise for
early and preventative treatments for this
disease, which impacts nearly four percent
of the population over age 60.
"Our discovery is significant, because it gives
us the first hope for slowing the
progression of the disease," says Dr. Ula V.
Jurkunas, the principal investigator of the
study, who is a scientist at Schepens Eye
Research Institute and a corneal surgeon at
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary in
Boston.
"If we can identify how free radicals are
involved in this and what antioxidants can
fight them, we can create a regimen that can
help protect the cornea," she adds.
(Antioxidants are molecules such as vitamins
or certain proteins that bind with and
neutralize free radicals.)
FECD destroys cells in the endothelial or
deepest layer of the cornea, which is the
clear tissue that makes up the front portion
of the eye.
These endothelial cells are equipped with pumps
that expel excess water from the cornea and
keep it clear. Without these cells, the
cornea swells and vision clouds, and, in the
late stages, vision is completely blocked.
Because corneal endothelial cells do not
regenerate themselves, the only effective
treatment for Fuchs has been corneal
transplant, in which a surgeon removes the
injured layer and replaces it with the donor
endothelium.
While scientists have made progress in
identifying some genes that cause the
disease, they have made little or no
progress in defining the mechanisms at play.
As a surgeon who performs hundreds of
transplants, Jurkunas began to believe that
a free radical process might be part of what
is happening within the Fuchs
dystrophy-plagued cornea. Free radicals are
unstable molecules released by the body,
which destabilize other molecules through a
process known as oxidization, which causes
cell death. Antioxidants are known to bind
with and neutralize free radicals.
To test the theory, Jurkunas and her colleagues
took numerous tissue samples from patients
undergoing corneal transplants and tested
them for evidence of free radical oxidation
and subsequent tissue damage.
In the significant majority of specimens, the
scientists found that the level of
antioxidants was less than normal (or
down-regulated). They also found evidence of
high rates of damage to the cells' DNA,
which is particularly susceptible to free
radicals.
According to Jurkunas, the next step is to
identify the specific antioxidants that
would neutralize the free radicals involved
in the damage and, therefore, could prevent
or block their destructive action.
What should patients do in the meantime? While
no conclusions should be drawn from these
early results, Jurkunas recommends that
patients at risk for Fuchs eat a healthy
diet rich in leafy green vegetables, such as
broccoli and Brussels sprouts, take
multivitamins and wear UV protection
outdoors.