CHLOROQUINE RETINOPATHY IN RHESUS-MONKEY
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 17 (12) , 1158-1175
Abstract
Chloroquine was administered i.m. 5 days a wk to rhesus monkeys for as long as 4 1/3 yr. No clinical, fluorescein angiographic, or electrophysiological evidence of retinal damage was observed. However, chloroquine/chloroquine byproduct analysis of the ocular tissues revealed an enormous binding capacity of the pigmented tissues of the eye (choroid plus RPE [retinal pigment epithelium], ciliary body, and iris) with eventual accumulation observed in the retina. Despite the normal ophthalmic appearance and function, extensive pathological changes occurred in the retinas and choroids of these experimental monkeys. The chloroquine caused an initial dramatic effect on the ganglion cells, and the photoreceptors were affected shortly thereafter. Patchy degeneration of the ganglion cells and photoreceptors then progressed over several years, with the choroid and pigment epithelium ultimately deteriorating as well.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: