Retinal damage could be due to subclinical inflammation in optic nerve
Posted: Tue Aug 11, 2020 2:32 am
Retinal and brain damage during multiple sclerosis course: inflammatory activity is a key factor in the first 5 years
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-70255-z
The mechanisms by which the retina is damaged in MS may involve primary retinal degeneration, trans-synaptic degeneration due to lesions in the posterior afferent visual pathway and retrograde degeneration due to inflammation (clinical or sub-clinical) in the optic nerve.
The close time relationship observed in our study between focal brain inflammatory activity and retinal changes suggests a fundamental role of sub-clinical micro-inflammation in the optic nerve for retinal neuro-axonal damage in the first years of MS onset
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-70255-z
The mechanisms by which the retina is damaged in MS may involve primary retinal degeneration, trans-synaptic degeneration due to lesions in the posterior afferent visual pathway and retrograde degeneration due to inflammation (clinical or sub-clinical) in the optic nerve.
The close time relationship observed in our study between focal brain inflammatory activity and retinal changes suggests a fundamental role of sub-clinical micro-inflammation in the optic nerve for retinal neuro-axonal damage in the first years of MS onset