Vascular occlusion in diabetic retinopathy. A qualitative and quantitative histopathological study.

2009 
The retinal vessels from seven diabetic patients and from six age-matched normal controls were studied qualitatively and quantitatively using various histological staining techniques. In diabetic patients the walls of retinal arterioles and capillaries showed significantly more staining than normals for periodic acid Schiff (neutral glycoproteins), Sirius red (connective tissue), and for Alcian blue at pH 2.6, pH 5.8 and at pH 5.8 combined with MgCl2 in concentrations less than 0.9 M (acid mucopolysaccharides). In the retina from diabetic patients there was no difference between the number of capillaries staining with these dyes in areas of vascular occlusion and in adjacent control areas. Furthermore, in areas of vascular occlusion, the material accumulated centrally to occlude the lumen of ghost vessels did not stain with any of the dyes used. A homogenous material, accumulated in the outer retina in areas of vascular occlusion in the retina from diabetic patients, only stained with Alcian blue at pH 5.8 combined with MgCl2 in concentrations less than 0.4 M, suggesting a different molecular composition from the Alcian blue material accumulated in the retinal vascular walls. The findings are in accordance with the knowledge that basement membranes of retinal vessels are thickened in diabetes mellitus. However, the findings also indicate that basement membrane thickening cannot fully account for vascular occlusion in diabetic retinopathy.
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