The disease AMD involves loss of central vision, people with advanced disease being unable to read, watch TV, enjoy the cinema, drive, or use a computer − in short, everyday living becomes very difficult. The research, which is published this week in the international medical journal, Nature Medicine, is supported by Science Foundation Ireland, the American Health Assistance Foundation (AHAF), the Health Research Board (HRB) and Fighting Blindness Ireland.
The key diagnostic feature of AMD is the presence of “drusen”, which are recognised during an eye exam as yellowish/white deposits in the central region of the retina called the macula. Dry AMD is characterised by the presence of excessive amounts of drusen and there are currently no forms of therapy other than recommended lifestyle changes such as giving up smoking, which is a recognised risk factor. However, a significant number of cases of the “dry” form of AMD can progress to the “wet” form, where blood vessels underneath the retina begin to grow, leading to central blindness. If you hold two coins immediately in front of your eyes, you will see a single large black circle blocking out your central vision. This is a very realistic simulation of what it is like to live with advanced disease.
“Traditionally, inflammation in the retina or indeed the eye in general is not beneficial and is a pathological hallmark of many eye diseases, including AMD. However we have identified, that one inflammatory component termed IL-18 acts as a so-called anti-angiogenic factor, preventing the progression of wet AMD” says Dr Campbell.
“The progression from “dry” to “wet” AMD appears to be mediated by the inflammatory component IL-18, our results directly suggest that controlling or indeed augmenting the levels of IL-18 in the retinas of patients with dry AMD could prevent the development of the wet form of disease, which leads us to an exciting new prospect for a novel therapy for AMD” says Dr Doyle.
The research was undertaken at Trinity College’s Ocular Genetics Unit, Director, Professor Pete Humphries and at the laboratories of Professor Luke O’Neill at the Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, in collaboration with Professor Joe Holyfield at the Cole Eye Institute at Cleveland, Ohio.
Full title of the paper: ‘NLRP3 has a protective role in age-related macular degeneration through the induction of IL-18 by drusen components’
Original source here.
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