Silva-Araújo A, Tavares M A, Patacao M H, Carolino R M
Institute for Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Porto, Portugal.
Retina. 1996;16(5):411-8. doi: 10.1097/00006982-199616050-00008.
The use of drugs of abuse--e.g., cocaine--during pregnancy has been associated with abnormalities of the visual system. The authors studied the effects of prenatal exposure to drugs of abuse, especially cocaine, on the vascular system of the retina in newborn infants and in an experimental model in the rat.
The animal study was conducted in pregnant Wistar rats injected subcutaneously with cocaine hydrochloride (60 mg/kg body weight/day) from gestation days 8 to 22. Male offspring were killed at postnatal days 7, 14, and 30 and perfused with fixative, and the retinas were dissected and processed for microscopic observation. The ophthalmologic observations were conducted in a population of newborn infants born to women who abused many drugs during pregnancy and in a control group of women with no history of illicit drug use.
Vascular disruptive lesions were seen after prenatal exposure to cocaine in the rat: round intraretinal hemorrhages, ischemic and hypoperfused areas located at the temporal part and often extending from the posterior pole to the periphery of the retina. The ophthalmologic observation of the newborns showed a higher incidence of vascular disruptive lesions in infants in whom exposure to drugs of abuse was affirmative during pregnancy. In the cases in which cocaine consumption was reported, they consisted in blot full-thickness hemorrhages with rounded domed contours suggestive of venous occlusion and retinal ischemia, very similar to the lesions seen in the animal model. These hemorrhagic lesions, morphologically similar to neonatal retinal hemorrhages, had a higher incidence than in controls; they also took longer to resolve when compared with the reabsorption time of the neonatal hemorrhages due to birth trauma and the hemorrhagic lesions in newborns of mothers in whom consumption of other drugs--but not cocaine--were reported.
A topographic and morphologic parallelism can be established between the retinal vascular alterations found in humans consuming cocaine and in the animal model of prenatal exposure to this drug of abuse; although findings from animal studies may be difficult to apply directly to humans, these data strongly support that cocaine can be a causal factor for the occurrence of retinal vascular disruption in newborns.
孕期使用滥用药物——如可卡因——已被证实与视觉系统异常有关。作者研究了产前暴露于滥用药物,尤其是可卡因,对新生儿视网膜血管系统以及大鼠实验模型的影响。
动物实验中,在妊娠第8至22天,给怀孕的Wistar大鼠皮下注射盐酸可卡因(60毫克/千克体重/天)。雄性后代在出生后第7天、14天和30天处死,灌注固定液,然后解剖视网膜并进行显微镜观察。对孕期滥用多种药物的妇女所生新生儿群体以及无非法药物使用史的对照组妇女进行眼科观察。
大鼠产前暴露于可卡因后出现血管破坏病变:视网膜内圆形出血、颞侧缺血和灌注不足区域,且常从后极延伸至视网膜周边。对新生儿的眼科观察显示,孕期暴露于滥用药物的婴儿中,血管破坏病变的发生率更高。在报告使用过可卡因的病例中,病变表现为圆形穹顶状轮廓的全层出血,提示静脉阻塞和视网膜缺血,与动物模型中所见病变非常相似。这些出血性病变在形态上与新生儿视网膜出血相似,其发生率高于对照组;与因出生创伤导致的新生儿出血以及报告使用其他药物(而非可卡因)的母亲所生新生儿的出血性病变的吸收时间相比,这些病变的消退时间更长。
在使用可卡因的人类以及产前暴露于这种滥用药物的动物模型中发现的视网膜血管改变之间,可以建立地形学和形态学上的平行关系;尽管动物研究结果可能难以直接应用于人类,但这些数据有力地支持可卡因可能是新生儿视网膜血管破坏发生的一个病因。