Elsevier

Ophthalmology

Volume 107, Issue 12, December 2000, Pages 2256-2266
Ophthalmology

Dominant late-onset retinal degeneration with regional variation of sub-retinal pigment epithelium deposits, retinal function, and photoreceptor degeneration

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0161-6420(00)00419-XGet rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open archive

Abstract

Purpose

To clarify the pathogenesis of late-onset retinal degeneration (L-ORD), an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by thick deposits of lipid-rich material between the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and Bruch’s membrane.

Study design

Comparative clinicopathologic case report and case series.

Tissues

Eyes of an 82-year-old L-ORD eye donor and an age-matched control.

Subjects

Five descendants of the eye donor and his affected sister.

Methods

The eyes were processed for histopathologic examination, including electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. Family members were examined clinically and with retinal function tests.

Results

The L-ORD eye had sub-RPE deposits that were positive for lipid, including esterified and unesterified cholesterol. The deposits were thinnest in the macula, which retained the highest percentage of photoreceptors. In the periphery, RPE thinning and photoreceptor loss correlated with thickness of the sub-RPE deposits. The eye donor was asymptomatic until his late 50s, when he developed problems with adapting to darkness. At age 68, the eye donor had normal acuity but a midperipheral scotoma and subnormal electroretinograms (ERGs); visual loss was progressive. The five descendants (at the time of examination ages 44–58) of the eye donor and his affected sister, who were at 50/50 risk of inheriting L-ORD, had normal ERGs, but four showed defects in dark adaptation. The dark adaptation abnormalities had a distribution similar to the thickness of the sub-RPE deposits in the eye donor, with slow kinetics in the midperiphery and normal kinetics centrally.

Conclusions

The L-ORD donor eye differed from a previous case in the regional distribution of sub-RPE deposits and photoreceptors. In the next generation of this L-ORD family, the first expression of disease, abnormal dark adaptation, mirrored the regional distribution of the deposits in the donor eye. The fine structure and staining characteristics of the sub-RPE deposits in L-ORD resemble those in age-related macular degeneration and Sorsby fundus dystrophy.

Cited by (0)

Supported in part by Foundation Fighting Blindness, Hunt Valley, Maryland; Paul and Evanina Bell Mackall Foundation Trust, New York, New York; Chatlos Foundation, Longwood, Florida; Research to Prevent Blindness, New York, New York; Macular Disease Foundation, Virginia Beach, Virginia; and by NIH (grants EY05627 and EY06109), Bethesda, Maryland.