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- <html>
- <head><title>The transparency of life: Cataracts as a model of age-related disease</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- The transparency of life: Cataracts as a model of age-related disease
- </h1>
-
- <em><p>
- Cataracts can disappear when the eye's metabolic condition is corrected. A supply of energy is essential
- to maintain the transparent structure.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Lactic acid increases as carbon dioxide decreases, during a typical energy deficiency. Deficient
- thyroid, and the resulting excess of cortisol relative to pregnenolone and progesterone, define the
- energy deficiency.
- </p>
- <p>
- Increased lactate relative to CO2 in the cell alters cell pH and electrical charge, causing swelling.
- Swelling and increased water content characterize the cataract.
- </p>
- <p>
- High altitude is inversely related to cataracts, despite the known role of sunlight in causing
- cataracts; this is a strong confirmation of the protective role of carbon dioxide.
- </p></em>
-
- <hr />
-
- <p>
- In the markets around Lake Patzcuaro, they sell green transparent fish, about 6 inches long. When cooked,
- the meat is white, like ordinary fish. Most fish filets are a little translucent, but are at least cloudy,
- and usually pink by transmitted light. I don"t know how the transparent fish work, because it seems that the
- blood and the network of blood vessels needed to sustain muscle activity would diffuse the light. Anyway,
- cooking disrupts the mysteriously ordered state of water and proteins that makes them transparent, roughly
- the way egg-white loses its transparency when it is cooked. I have never heard a convincing explanation for
- the opacity of cooked egg-white, either, but anything that disrupts the original structuring of the
- protein-water interaction will destroy the transparency.
- </p>
- <p>
- Around 1970, I used a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), which is the basis for the
- procedure known as MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), to compare the state of water in old (uterine) tissue
- and young tissue. Old tissue predictably contains less water than young tissue, but I found that the water
- in the old tissue was in a relatively free and uncontrolled state. When tissue swells and takes up water,
- more of the water is likely to be in this uncontrolled state, and this is one of the things that makes MRI
- so useful, because tumors, for example, show up vividly because of their large amount of uncontrolled
- ("unbound") water. I suspect that the measurements I made on uterine tissue showed a localized effect, that
- opposed the general trend toward increased dryness with aging. In the case of cataracts, this is clearly the
- case<strong>: </strong> Most of the lens becomes drier with age, but at a certain point there is a reversal,
- and some of the tissue takes up too much water. That"s why I refer to cataracts as a model of age-related
- disease, rather than as a model of aging. In this sense, I am including them among the inflammatory diseases
- of aging--colitis, arthritis, and cancer, for example. MRI now can show developing cataracts before they are
- visible, because of increased water content in the area.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lens of the eye is a fairly dense, tough, transparent living structure, which can develop opaque areas,
- cataracts, as a result of old age, poisoning, radiation, disease, or trauma. The varieties of cataract
- relate to the causes. Most of the oxidative metabolism of the lens is in or near the epithelial layer that
- surrounds it. Old-age cataracts most often begin in this region.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although the efficient oxidative energy metabolism occurs near the surface of the lens, <strong>there is a
- constant flow of fluid through the lens,</strong>
- entering it mainly in the front and back, and leaving on its "sides" or equator (considering the front and
- back as the poles, the direction light passes through). Oxygen and nutrients are supplied to the lens by way
- of this circulation of fluid, entering mostly from the aqueous humor in front (which also supplies the
- cornea), but also from the vitreous humor behind the lens.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- When the flow of nutrients and energy is impaired, the organized state of the protein and water system in
- the cell is damaged, and an excess of water is taken up by the cells, as the protein content decreases. The
- loss of organization causes light to be dispersed, with a loss of transparency.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lens of the eye is usually treated as something so specialized that it is hardly considered to be part
- of our living substance, just as dentistry has tended to treat teeth as inert things to be approached
- mechanically, rather than physiologically. <strong>The lens"s circulatory system is very interesting,
- because of what it says about the nature of living substance. In the absence of blood vessels, it
- provides its own flow of nutrients.</strong> This flow is reminiscent of the flow of substances through
- the dentine channels of the teeth, through the axons of nerves (two-way transport in a very narrow channel),
- and, in some ways recalls the flow of fluids in plants, called "guttation" (drop formation), which is
- disturbing to botanists, because it is contrary to the textbook descriptions of proper physiology.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>The flow of material through lens cells, dentine canals, and nerve axons should allow us to gain a
- perspective in which these observable processes become a model for other biological situations</strong>
- in which "transport" occurs<strong>:</strong> Kidney, intestine, or the skin of frogs, for example, in which
- water, ions, and other solutes are moved in considerable quantities.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- When cells metabolize, they create gradients. In the cell, electrical, chemical, osmotic, and thermal
- gradients, for example, are constantly being produced or maintained. The whole substance of the cell is
- involved in its life processes. Because of prejudices introduced 200 years ago, the life of the cell has
- been relegated to its "membrane" (where hypothetical "membrane pumps" reside) and its nucleus. <strong>
- When the term "cell" (hollow space) came into use instead of "corpuscle" (little body), a mind-set came
- into existence that discounted the importance of most of the living material,</strong> and claimed that
- it was a mere "random solution." Random solutions don"t do much. The wonderful "membrane," under the
- direction of the nucleus (and its set of instructions), took care of everything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Whenever assimilation or excretion took place, it was explained by inventing a property possessed by the
- cell "membranes." Therefore, we have physiology textbooks that have an unfounded explanation for everything.
- Before Copernicus, planetary movements were described as arbitrary "epicycles." They didn't make sense, but
- people studied them and felt that they were important. "Membrane physiology" is the modern equivalent of the
- Ptolemaic epicycles.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- We know that glucose can be metabolized into pyruvic acid, which, in the presence of oxygen, can be
- metabolized into carbon dioxide. Without oxygen, pyruvic acid can be converted into lactic acid. The
- production of lactic acid tends to increase the pH inside the cell, and its excretion can lower the pH
- outside the cell.
- </p>
- <p>
- The decrease of carbon dioxide that generally accompanies increased lactic acid, corresponds to increased
- intracellular pH. Carbon dioxide binds to many types of protein, for example by forming carbamino groups,
- changing the protein conformation, as well as its electrical properties, such as its isoelectric point. With
- increased pH, cell proteins become more strongly ionized, tending to separate, allowing water to enter the
- spaces, in the same way a gel swells in an alkaline solution.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bohr-Haldane effect describes the fact that hemoglobin releases oxygen in the presence of carbon
- dioxide, and releases carbon dioxide in the presence of oxygen. When oxygen is too abundant, it makes
- breathing more difficult, and one of its effects is to cause carbon dioxide to be lost rapidly. At high
- altitude, more carbon dioxide is retained, and this makes cellular respiration more efficient.
- </p>
- <p>
- The importance of carbon dioxide to cell control process, and to the structure of the cell and the structure
- of proteins in general suggested that degenerative diseases would be less common at high altitude. Wounds
- and broken bones heal faster at high altitude, but the available statistics are especially impressive in two
- of the major degenerative conditions, cancer and cataracts.
- </p>
- <p></p>
- <p>
- The two biggest studies of altitude and cataracts (involving 12,217 patients in one study, and 30,565
- lifelong residents in a national survey in Nepal) showed a negative correlation between altitude and the
- incidence of cataract. At high altitude, cataracts appeared at a later age. <strong>In Nepal, an increase of
- a few thousand feet in elevation decreased the incidence of cataracts by 2.7 times. At the same time, it
- was found that exposure to sunlight increased the incidence of cataracts, and since the intensity of
- ultraviolet radiation is increased with altitude, this makes the decreased incidence of cataracts even
- more important.</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- All of the typical causes of cataracts, aging, poisons, and radiation, decrease the formation of carbon
- dioxide, and tend to increase the formation of lactic acid.<strong>
- Lactic acid excess is typically found in eyes with cataracts.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- The electrical charge on the structural proteins will tend to increase in the presence of lactic acid or the
- deficiency of carbon dioxide, and the increase of charge will tend to increase the absorption of water.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lens can survive for a considerable length of time <em>in vitro </em>
- (since it has its own circulatory system),<em> </em>
- so it has been possible to demonstrate that changes in the composition of the fluid can cause opacities to
- form, or to disappear.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Oxidants, including hydrogen peroxide which occurs naturally in the aqueous humor, can cause opacities to
- form quickly, but they will also disappear quickly in a solution that restores metabolic energy. The lens
- regulates itself powerfully<strong>;</strong> for example, it will swell when put into a hypotonic solution,
- but will quickly adapt, returning to approximately its normal size.
- </p>
- <p>
- Several years ago, I saw what appeared to be oxidant-induced cataracts. Two women had a very sudden onset of
- cataracts, and I asked about their diet and supplements<strong>;</strong> it turned out that one of them had
- begun taking 500 mg of zinc daily a few months earlier, and the other had begun taking 600 mg of zinc and
- 250 mg of iron, on her doctor"s recommendation, just a couple of months before the cataracts appeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- For some reason, there have been many nutritional supplements sold as cataract remedies in the form of eye
- drops. I suppose a trace of the material could diffuse through the cornea into the aqueous humor, where it
- might make a difference in the lens"s nutrient supply, but it seems more reasonable to treat the body as a
- whole, nourishing every part in a balanced way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides living at a high elevation or breathing extra carbon dioxide, the most certain way to increase the
- amount of carbon dioxide in the eye, and to prevent an excess of lactic acid, is to make sure that your
- thyroid function is adequate.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- One man who took thyroid, USP, and vitamin E told me that his cataracts had regressed, but I haven"t known
- other people who tried this.
- </p>
- <p>
- If a person already has distinct cataracts, it might be worthwhile to experiment with a relatively high
- degree of hypercapnia, for example, breathing a 5% mixture of CO2 in air.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carbon dioxide, at higher levels than are normal at sea level, has a profound effect on free radicals,
- reducing the free radical activity in the blood to approximately zero, before reaching the level that
- produces acidosis.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are several situations in which carbon dioxide affects the hydration, water content, of biological
- materials, that I think give an insight into its effects on the lens. Hydrophilic glycoproteins are involved
- in each case. These are proteins with attached chains of sugar molecules that make them associate with a
- large amount of water. In the cornea, increased carbon dioxide strongly protects against swelling. The bulk
- of the cornea is a connective tissue that is relatively simple and passive compared to the compact cellular
- structure of the lens, and it is conventional to describe the thin layers of cells on the inside and outside
- of the cornea as being responsible for the water content of the underlying substance. However, even when the
- epithelial cells are removed, it has been demonstrated that carbon dioxide is able to prevent corneal
- swelling. (M.V. Riley, et al., "The roles of bicarbonate and CO2 in transendothelial fluid movement and
- control of corneal thickness," <em>
- Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 36(1),</em> 103-112, 1995.)
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Bronchial mucous secretions are an even simpler system, so it is very interesting that carbon dioxide is
- recognized as the most powerful regulator of their behavior. (This has important implications for "cystic
- fibrosis," or mucoviscidosis.) Goodman and Gilman (page 1068, <em>
- Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics,</em> 2nd Edition, Macmillan Co., 1956), say
- </p>
- <p>
- "Among inhalants, steam and carbon dioxide have been found to be excellent expectorants. Relative humidity
- above 85 per cent liquefies sputum, decreases its viscosity...." "Carbon dioxide is the most effective agent
- of all. It not only lowers the viscosity of tenacious sputum, thereby facilitating expectoration, but it
- decreases the volume of sputum by promoting its active resorption by bronchial mucosa." "A five to ten per
- cent concentration of carbon dioxide is adequate and well tolerated if administered at intervals." "Oxygen
- has been shown to be an antiexpectorant and has effects opposite to those of carbon"
- </p>
- <p>
- Oxygen tends to displace carbon dioxide from tissue, and is a source of free radicals.
- </p>
- <p>
- One of the best-known free radical scavenging substances that has been widely used as a drug is iodide. It
- has been used to treat asthma, parasites, syphilis, cancer, Graves" disease, periodontal disease, and
- arteriosclerosis. Diseases that produce tissue overgrowth associated with inflammation--granulomas--have
- been treated with iodides, and although the iodide doesn"t necessarily kill the germ, it does help to break
- down and remove the granuloma. Leprosy and syphilis were among the diseases involving granulomas* that were
- treated in this way. In the case of tuberculosis, it has been suggested that iodides combine with
- unsaturated fatty acids which inhibit proteolytic enzymes, and thus allow for the removal of the abnormal
- tissue.
- </p>
- <p>
- In experimental animals, iodide clearly delays the appearance of cataracts. (Buchberger, et al., 199l.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Inflammation, edema, and free radical production are closely linked, and are produced by most things that
- interfere with energy production.
- </p>
- <p>
- Endotoxin, produced by bacteria, mainly in the intestine, disrupts energy production, and promotes
- maladaptive inflammation. The wide spectrum of benefit that iodide has, especially in diseases with an
- inflammatory component, suggests first that it protects tissue by blocking free radical damage, but it also
- suggests the possibility that it might specifically protect against endotoxin.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- There are subtler differences in transparence that probably have a variety of causes, but differences in
- water content or hydration might be involved in the lower transparency that has been seen in women's lenses.
- Estrogen, which tends to produce edema and hypotonic body fluids, also increases prolactin production.
- Prolactin is involved in water and electrolyte regulation, and it has been found to <strong>accelerate the
- development of experimental cataracts.</strong> (M. C. Ng, et al, 1987.) These hormones are associated
- with the calcification of soft tissues, and cataracts contain very high levels of calcium. (Avarachan and
- Rawal, 1987; Hightower and Reddy, 1982.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen is strongly associated with free radical processes, calcium mobilization, and acetylcholine
- release, all of which are involved in the process of excitoxicity. Alvarez, et al., (1996) have shown a
- possible involvement of acetylcholine in calcium mobilization in the lens.
- </p>
- <p>
- Serotonin is another regulatory substance strongly associated with prolactin and estrogen, and it also can
- be involved in disrupting the metabolism of the lens. This is one of the potential dangers in using
- supplemental tryptophan. (Candia, et al., 1980.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Old age commonly involves some changes in the color of tissues--loss of pigment from hair and skin, with
- appearance of new pigment (age pigment, lipofuscin), which may appear as "liver spots." But there is also a
- tendency of the toenails, fingernails, teeth, and lenses to turn yellow or brown. Some of this dark material
- seems to be age pigment, derived from unsaturated fatty acids, but other components have been identified,
- for example, tryptophan from damaged proteins. The Maillard reaction (similar to the browning that occurs in
- bread crust) has often been mentioned in relation to aging, and involves the combination of protein amino
- groups with sugars. But the browning of the lens tends to be associated with the general age related drying
- of the lens, it isn"t irregularly distributed, and it doesn"t significantly harm vision.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- When I first heard about the age-related browning of the lens, I thought that the experience of colors would
- be affected, so I devised a test in which the relative darkness of blue and yellow could be judged in
- comparison with a graded strip of shades of grey.
- </p>
- <p>
- After people of ages ranging from 10 to 80 had given exactly the same matches, I realized that the nervous
- system probably corrects for the "yellow filter" effect of the brown lens.
- </p>
- <p>
- The browning of tissues will be the subject of another newsletter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the interesting causes of cataracts<strong>: </strong>
- Tamoxifen and hypotonic fluids, sodium deficiency<strong>;</strong> toxicity of tryptophan<strong>;</strong>
- oxidants (metals, hydrogen peroxide, PUFA); diabetes, photosensitizers and sunlight<strong>; </strong>
-
- excess calcium, deficient magnesium. Excess cortisol. Radiation. Arachidonic and linoleic acids in other
- situations have been found to block cells' regulation of their water content. Hypothyroidism tends to
- increase the activity of serotonin, estrogen, prolactin, calcium, and the tendency of tissues to retain
- water, and to decrease the level of ATP.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the factors that probably have a role in preventing cataracts<strong>: </strong>
- Thyroid, progesterone, pregnenolone, vitamin E, iodide, pyruvate. Increasing the carbon dioxide lowers the
- cell"s pH, and tends to resist swelling. Palmitic acid (a saturated fat that can be synthesized by our
- tissues) is normally oxidized by the lens. Calcium blockers experimentally prevent cataracts, suggesting
- that magnesium and thyroid (which also act to exclude calcium from cells) would have the same effect.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thyroid hormone is essential for maintaining adequate carbon dioxide production, for minimizing lactic acid,
- cortisol and prolactin, for regulating calcium and magnesium, for avoiding hypotonicity of the body fluids,
- and for improving the ratio of palmitic acid to linoleic acid.
- </p>
- <p>.</p>
- <p><strong> </strong></p>
-
- <p>
- <strong> </strong>
- <strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- "Inhibition of ionic transport and ATPase activities by serotonin analogues in the isolated toad lens,"
- Candia OA; Lanzetta PA; Alvarez LJ; Gaines W, Biochim Biophys Acta (602)2, 389-400, 1980. "Tryptamine,
- 5-methyltryptamine and 5-methoxytryptamine had dual effects: 1 mM in the posterior bathing solution
- depressed the potential difference of the posterior face of the lens, which resulted in an increase in the
- translenticular potential difference and short-circuit current; 1 mM in the anterior solution (in contact
- with the lens epithelium) produced a quick and pronounced reduction of the potential difference of the
- anterior face. This resulted in a 90-100% decline of the translenticular short-circuit current. Serotonin
- and tryptamine were then tested for their effect on the ATPases of lens epithelium. Both amines inhibited
- the enzymes with tryptamine at 5 mM completely inhibiting all ATPase activity. <strong>Since tryptophan is
- transported from the aqueous humor into the lens and may be converted by lens enzymes to serotonin and
- tryptamine, these findings may have physiological implications in cataractogenesis."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- "Effects of Ca2+ on rabbit translens short-circuit current: evidence for a Ca2+ inhibitable K+ conductance,"
- Alvarez LJ; Candia OA; Zamudio AC, Curr Eye Res, 1996 Dec, 15:12, 1198-207. PURPOSE: To characterize the
- effects of medium Ca2+ levels on rabbit lens electrical properties. Overall, these results suggest that
- <strong>lens Ca2(+)-mobilizing agents (e.g. acetylcholine)</strong> could trigger the inhibition of
- epithelial K+ conductance(s) by the direct action of Ca2+ on K+ channels."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- "Effects of Ca2+ on rabbit translens short-circuit current: evidence for a Ca2+ inhibitable K+ conductance,"
- Alvarez LJ; Candia OA; Zamudio AC, Curr Eye Res, 1996 Dec, 15:12, 1198-207. "PURPOSE: To characterize the
- effects of medium Ca2+ levels on rabbit lens electrical properties. Overall, these results suggest that lens
- Ca2(+)-mobilizing agents (e.g. acetylcholine) could trigger the inhibition of epithelial K+ conductance(s)
- by the direct action of Ca2+ on K+ channels."
- </p>
- <p>
- "D600 increases the resistance associated with the equatorial potassium current of the lens," Walsh SP;
- Patterson JW, Exp Eye Res, 1992 Jul, 55:1, 81-5 "This effect is similar to that produced by quinine and by a
- calcium-free medium, and is attributed to the prevention of an increase in the calcium-dependent conductance
- produced by pCMPS."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Effects of hydrogen peroxide oxidation and calcium channel blockers on the equatorial potassium current of
- the frog lens," Walsh SP; Patterson JW, Exp Eye Res, 1994 Mar, 58:3, 257-65. "Hydrogen peroxide, in
- concentrations of 10-1000 microM, produces two major changes in the current-voltage relationships associated
- with the equatorial potassium current of the lens. First, the resting and reversal potentials become more
- negative than they were prior to treatment with hydrogen peroxide and second, the membrane resistance
- related to the equatorial current is decreased. The shift in the resting and reversal potentials is in the
- opposite direction from that produced by ouabain. Based on the Nernst equation, the shift in the reversal
- potential suggests that there is an <strong>increase in the concentration of potassium in the lens. The 86Rb
- uptake and efflux are increased. These observations suggest that hydrogen peroxide stimulates the
- Na,K-pump. The decrease in membrane resistance is inhibited by 100 microM of quinine, a
- calcium-dependent potassium channel blocker, and does not decrease in a calcium-free medium. This
- suggests that the decrease in resistance may be secondary to an increase in lenticular calcium.</strong>
- These effects of hydrogen peroxide are similar to those of p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonate (pCMPS), a nearly
- impermeant sulfhydryl binding agent,<strong>
- and suggest that permeant hydrogen peroxide may increase calcium influx by acting on sulfhydryl groups
- on the outer surface of lens membranes. Verapamil, a calcium channel blocker, is reported to prevent
- cataract formation.</strong>"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Effect of prolactin on galactose cataractogenesis," Ng MC; Tsui JY; Merola LO; Unakar NJ phthalmic Res
- 19:2, 82-94, 1987. "Prolactin has been known to affect the water and electrolyte balance. Because increased
- lens hydration has been shown to be a common phenomenon in most, if not all types of cataracts, we have been
- interested in investigating a possible role of prolactin in sugar cataract induction and progression. For
- this study, we have used morphological and biochemical approaches. The prolactin delivery method involved
- intraperitoneal implantation of one or more pellets in Sprague-Dawley female rats. Following implantation of
- the desired number of prolactin or control (nonprolactin) pellets, animals were either fed galactose and lab
- chow, or lab chow diet. Gross morphological observations of whole lenses, slit-lamp examination of lenses
- and light microscopic analysis of lens sections showed that in the galactose-fed prolactin group, galactose
- associated alteration progressed faster and total opacification (mature cataract development) was achieved
- earlier than in the nonprolactin group. The levels of galactose and dulcitol were higher in the lenses of
- galactose-fed prolactin treated rats as compared to lenses from nonprolactin (control) rats. No significant
- difference in lens Na+-K+ ATPase activity between the prolactin and nonprolactin group was observed. Our
- results indicate that prolactin accelerates galactose-induced cataractogenesis in rats."
- </p>
- <p>
- "A hypothetical mechanism for toxic cataract due to oxidative damage to the lens epithelial membrane,"
- Bender CJ Med Hypotheses, 1994 Nov, 43:5, 307-11 Lenticular opacities can be induced by numerous external
- agents that <strong>coincide with those that catalyze oxidative damage to lipids.
- </strong>One of the consequences of lipid peroxidation is that the affected membrane is rendered more
- permeable to protons. A proton leak in the tight epithelium of lens <strong>would uncouple the
- Na+/K(+)-ATPases that regulate the water</strong> and ionic content of the bounded tissue. Once
- regulatory control of the osmotic pressure is lost, <strong>
- the phase state of the</strong> cell's soluble proteins would change, <strong>
- leading to refractive changes or, in extreme cases, precipitation</strong>. The same does not occur in
- cornea because the stroma is an extracellular polymer blend rather than solution of soluble polymers.
- Polymeric phase transitions in the cornea require that divalent cations pass the epithelial membrane, which
- can occur only through the action of ionophores.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tsubota K; Laing RA; Kenyon KR Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1987 May, 28:5, 785-9, <strong>Abnormalities in
- glucose metabolism are thought to be among the main causes of cataract formation.
- </strong>
- The authors have made noninvasive biochemical measurements of the lens that provide information concerning
- glucose metabolism in the lens epithelium. The autofluorescence of reduced pyridine nucleotides (PN) and
- oxidized flavoproteins (Fp) within the rabbit lens were noninvasively measured as a function of depth using
- redox fluorometry. The peak of the autofluorescence at 440 nm (excited at 360 nm) and 540 nm <strong
- >(excited at 460 nm) were determined at the lens epithelium. When 8 mM sodium pentobarbital, a known
- inhibitor of mitochondrial respiration, was applied to the lens, the autofluorescence peak at 440 nm
- increased and that at 540
- </strong>
- <strong>nm decreased. The 440 nm autofluorescence is thought to be from
- </strong>
-
- reduced pyridine nucleotides, whereas the 540 nm autofluorescence is from the oxidized flavoprotein.
- Blocking lens respiration with pentobarbital caused an increase in the PN/Fp ratio by a factor of 3 within
- 3.5 hr after pentobarbital application."
- </p>
- <p>
- [Use of pyrimidine bases and ATP for conservative treatment of early cataracts] Larionov LN Oftalmol Zh,
- 1977, 32:3, 221-2
- </p>
- <p>
- <hr />
- <strong>
- high levels of L-lactate and high ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous</strong>. 2.
- Immature cataractous lenses with anterior capsular/subcapsular opacity; intermediate levels of RTP,
- intermediate values for the sums of RTP, RDP, and AMP, <strong>high L-lactate levels, and intermediate
- values of the ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous.</strong>"
- </p>
- <p>
- Sulochana KN; Ramakrishnan S; Vasanthi SB; Madhavan HN; Arunagiri K; Punitham R, "First report of congenital
- or infantile cataract in deranged proteoglycan metabolism with released xylose," Br J Ophthalmol, 1997 Apr,
- 81:4, 319-23." "Of 220 children of both sexes below 12 years of age, with congenital or infantile cataract
- treated in Sankara Nethralaya, Madras, India, during a period of 2 years, 145 excreted fragments of GAG
- (heparan and chondroitin sulphates) in their urine. There was no such excretion among the control group of
- 50 children. <strong>
- The same was found accumulated in the blood and lenses of affected children.</strong>
- In addition, xylose was present in small amounts in the urine and blood and xylitol was present in the lens.
- There was a significant elevation in the <strong>activity of beta glucuronidase in lymphocytes and
- urine,</strong>
- when compared with normals. All the above findings suggest deranged proteoglycan metabolism. As the urine
- contained mostly GAG fragments and very little xylose, Benedict's reagent was not reduced. This ruled out
- galactosaemia.CONCLUSION: An increase of <strong>beta glucuronidase activity might have caused extensive
- fragmentation of GAG</strong> with resultant accumulation in the blood and lens and excretion in urine.
- Small amounts of xylose may have come from xylose links between GAG and core protein of proteoglycans. Owing
- to their polyanionic nature, GAG fragments in the lens might abstract sodium, and with it water, thereby
- increasing the hydration of the lens. Excessive hydration and the osmotic effect of xylitol from xylose
- might cause cataract. While corneal clouding has been reported in inborn acid mucopolysaccharidosis,
- congenital or infantile cataract with deranged metabolism of proteoglycans (acid
- mucopolysaccharide-xylose-protein complex) is reported in children for the first time."
- </p>
- <p>
- "State of electrolytes, osmotic balance and the activity of ATPase in the lenses of selenite--induced
- cataracts," Avarachan PJ; Rawal UM Indian J Ophthalmol, 1987, 35:5-6, 210-3. "Selenite-cataracts
- incorporated many morphological characteristics observed in human senile catracts. Progressive elevation of
- sodium, marked loss of potassium, <strong>several fold increment of calcium; considerable loss of magnesium
- levels,</strong>
- a dose-response reduction of total-ATPase activity <strong>and significant hydration are the important
- features</strong> observed in the lens during the progressive treatment of selenite. The
- sodium-potassium imbalance is found to be a secondary effect during the development of cataract and is
- suggested to bring about by <strong>an abnormal accumulation of calcium ions</strong> and inactivation of
- transport enzyme. The calcium activated proteases could be the promoting factor for the proteolysis and
- insolubilization of lens proteins in the inducement of selenite cataract. The impact of selenite on the SH
- containing ATPase anzymes could be the cause of impairment in energy metabolism, derangement of electrolytes
- and osmotic imbalance which, in turn, accelerate the cortical involvement of lens opacities."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- "Glucose metabolism by human cataracts in culture," Wolfe JK; Chylack LT Jr Exp Eye Res 43:2, 243-9, 1986.
- "Metabolism in human senile cataracts has been studied using uniformly labeled [14C]glucose. Intracapsularly
- extracted lenses were cultured in TC-199 media with a glucose concentration of 5.5 mM. Results show that
- lactate production accounts for 97% of the glucose metabolized. Under these standard incubation conditions
- there is negligible accumulation of alpha-glycerol phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, and sorbitol. The rate of
- lactate production was found to be relatively uniform over a range of cataract severities which were
- determined from the CCRG classification. The effects of several perturbants in the medium were
- measured.<strong>
- An ATP concentration of 3 mM was found to inhibit lactate production."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- M. V. Riley, et al., "The roles of bicarbonate and CO2 in transendothelial fluid movement and control of
- corneal thickness," Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 36(1), 103-112, 1995. <strong>"The equilibrium thickness
- of deepithelialized corneas swollen with HCO-/CO2 on both surfaces was 35 microns less than that of
- corneas swollen in HPO4-." "Normal corneal thickness can be maintained in vitro only in media that
- contain HCO3- at concentrations of more than 20 mM."</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- "The effect of X-irradiation on the sodium-potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase (Na-K-ATPase)
- activity in the epithelium of the rat lens. A histochemical and biochemical study," Palva M Acta Ophthalmol
- (Copenh), 1978 Jun, 56:3, 431-8. "The epithelial Na-K-ATPase activity of the rat lens was studied after
- X-irradiation at intervals of three to ninety days. The enzyme was demonstrated histochemically by light
- microscopy and it was measured biochemically by a fluorometric method. Neither histochemical nor biochemical
- changes of Na-K-ATPase content of the lens epithelium were observed during the development of cataract. In
- whole-mount preparations the enzyme activity was localized in the cell membranes. However, one month after
- radiation a few peripheral cells had in addition a precipitated over the whole cell. <strong>The unaltered
- Na-K-ATPase</strong>
- <strong>
- content in the epithelium</strong> suggests that the hydration of the lens after X-irradiation is
- primarily caused by <strong>changes in the passive permeability properties of the cell membranes and not by
- a decreased capacity of the activity cation pump."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- McNamara NA; Polse KA; Bonanno JA<strong> "Stromal acidosis modulates corneal swelling." </strong>
-
- Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1994 Mar, 35:3, 846-50 "PURPOSE. Studies have shown that stromal acidosis reduces
- the rate of corneal thickness recovery after induced edema, providing the first human in vivo evidence that
- corneal pH can influence corneal hydration control. This finding raises the question of the possible effect
- that pH may have on induced corneal swelling. To explore this question, the corneal swelling response to
- hypoxia was measured while stromal pH was controlled. METHODS. Corneal edema and stromal acidosis was
- induced in ten subjects by passing a mixture of nitrogen and carbon dioxide gas across the eyes through
- tight-fitting goggles. <strong>One eye of each subject received 100% N2, whereas the contralateral eye
- received a mixture of 95% N2 and 5% CO2. Exposures of 95% N2 + 5% CO2 lower pH on average to 7.16 versus
- 7.34 for 100% N2 alone.</strong> Before and after 2.5 hours of gas exposure, central corneal thickness
- (CCT) was measured. RESULTS. <strong>Eyes exposed to the lower pH environment (eg, N2 + CO2) developed less
- change in CCT</strong> compared to the eyes receiving N2 alone. Overall increase in CCT was 29.9 +/- 5.3
- microns for eyes exposed to the 95% N2 + 5% CO2 gas mixture, versus 37.1 +/- 4.8 microns for 100% N2 <strong
- >eyes (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS. The corneal swelling response to hypoxia can be reduced by lowering
- stromal pH. Because changes in corneal pH alone have not been found to alter steady-state CCT, it is
- proposed that pH
- </strong>
- exerts its effect only under non-steady-state conditions (ie, corneal swelling and deswelling). This
- suggests that acidosis may produce changes in the <strong>rate of lactate metabolism</strong> or alter
- endothelial hydraulic conductivity."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Buchberger W; Winkler R; Moser M; Rieger G, "Influence of iodide on cataractogenesis in Emory mice,"
- Ophthalmic Res, 1991, 23:6, 303-8. Cataract development was studied in two groups of Emory mice by
- periodical biomicroscopic examinations (beginning at 5 weeks of age) and by a final evaluation of
- water-soluble SH groups in the lenses. The experimental group was given 256 micrograms iodide/kg body weight
- with the drinking water throughout the study. The untreated control group received tap water. <strong>Iodide
- treatment induced a delay of cataract formation...."</strong> "A still significant difference in the
- degree of cataract was also found between the two groups at week 47 of age. No difference was found in the
- content of water-soluble SH groups. The results are discussed in relation <strong>to the known antioxidant
- and .OH-scavenging effect of iodide and to the oxidative changes in the lens occurring during
- progression of cataract development.</strong>"
- </p>
- <p>
- "[The chemical nature of the fluorescing products accumulating in the lipids of the crystalline lenses of
- mice with hereditary cataract]," Shvedova AA; Platonov ES; Polianskii NB; Babizhaev MA; Kagan VE Biull Eksp
- Biol Med, 1987 Mar, 103:3, 301-4.<strong>
- "The content of diene conjugates (lipid hydroperoxides) was shown to be significantly higher in lipids
- extracted from the lenses of mice with hereditary cataract than in the controls. The same holds true for
- characteristics of fluorescence of the end-product of lipid peroxidation."</strong> "It was established
- that high-molecular weight fluorescent fractions corresponded to lipid components of <strong>
- lipofuscin-like pigments.</strong> NMR and mass spectrometry of low-molecular weight fractions suggested
- that they contained predominantly products of free radical oxidation of <strong>long chain polyunsaturated
- fatty acids (C22:6). "</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- "Formation of N'-formylkynurenine in proteins from lens and other sources by exposure to sunlight," Pirie A
- Biochem J, 1971 Nov, 125:1, 203-8.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Lipid fluorophores of the human crystalline lens with cataract." Babizhayev MA Graefes Arch Clin Exp
- Ophthalmol, 1989, 227:4, 384-91 "It has been established that the development of cataract is accompanied by
- the formation of various fluorophores in the lipid fraction of the lens. These lipid-fluorescing products
- have been separated chromatographically according to polarity and molecular weight. It is shown that the
- initial stages of the development of cataract are characterized by the appearance of lipid fluorophores in
- the near ultraviolet and violet regions of the spectrum <strong>(excitation maximum 302-330 nm, emission
- maximum 411 nm) with low</strong> polarity and a small molecular weight; the maturing of the cataract
- is<strong>
- characterized by an increase in the intensity of the long-wave fluorescence of the lipids in the
- blue-green region (430-480 nm) and by the formation of
- </strong>
-
- polymeric high-molecular-weight fluorescing lipid products with high polarity. It has been demonstrated that
- the appearance of lipid fluorophores in the <strong>crystalline lens is associated with the free radical
- oxidative modification of the phospholipids and fatty acids in cataract."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- "Incidence of cataracts in the mobile eye hospitals of Nepal," Brandt F; Malla OK; Pradhan YM; Prasad LN;
- Rai NC; Pokharel RP; Lakhe S, Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol, 1982, 218:1, 25-7 The incidence of cataract
- in Nepal was determined from data collected in 14 mobile eye hospitals (called 'eye camps'). Of a total of
- <strong>12,217</strong> patients examined in the out-patient department (OPD), cataract surgery was
- performed on 2,163. The percentage of cataract patients in the OPD was <strong>less in the mountains (13.8%)
- than in the Tarai plains (19.8%).</strong>
- In the inhabitants of the mountains, the majority of whom belong to the Tibeto-Birman race, <strong
- >cataracts appeared at a significantly later age in both males and females compared to the people of the
- plains, who are mostly Indo-Aryan.</strong> Cataracts were discovered in both groups at a younger age in
- women than in men."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- "Associations among cataract prevalence, sunlight hours, and altitude in the Himalayas." Brilliant LB;
- Grasset NC; Pokhrel RP; Kolstad A; Lepkowski JM; Brilliant GE; Hawks WN; Pararajasegaram R., Am J Epidemiol
- 118:2, 250-64 1983. "The relationship between cataract prevalence, altitude, and sunlight hours was
- investigated in a <strong>large national probability sample survey of 105 sites</strong> in the Himalayan
- kingdom of Nepal, December 1980 through April 1981. Cataract of senile or unknown etiology was diagnosed by
- ophthalmologists in 873 of <strong>30,565</strong>
- <strong>full-time life-long residents</strong> of survey sites. Simultaneously, the altitude of sites was
- measured using a standard mountain altimeter. Seasonally adjusted average daily duration of sunlight
- exposure for each site was calculated by a method which took into account latitude and obstructions along
- the skyline. Age- and sex-standardized <strong>cataract prevalence was 2.7 times higher in sites at an
- altitude of 185 meters or less than in sites over 1000 meters. Cataract prevalence was negatively
- correlated with altitude</strong>
- <hr />
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>"The untenability of the sunlight hypothesis of cataractogenesis</strong>," Harding JJ Doc
- Ophthalmol 88:3-4, 345-9, 1994-95. "The excess prevalence of cataract in <strong>third world countries led
- early this century to the hypothesis that sunlight causes cataract. The hypothesis, which ignored
- differences in diet, culture, poverty and prevalence of other diseases</strong> such as diarrhoea,
- received little support until about thirty years ago when biochemical studies were set up to explore the
- browning of lens proteins, which is a common feature of cataract on the Indian subcontinent. Initially these
- studies were encouraging in that exposure to sunlight caused some changes seen in cataractous lenses, but
- eventually the hypothesis was rejected because the first change in the laboratory was the destruction of
- tryptophan, <strong>but this was not found in brown cataract lenses.</strong> A brown nuclear cataract could
- not be produced artificially in the laboratory using sunlight or UV exposure. Exposure of laboratory animals
- has produced lens opacities, but in most experiments the doses required have also caused keratitis,
- conjunctivitis, iritis and inflammation. The cornea seems more sensitive than the lens, which is not
- surprising, as it gets the first chance to absorb damaging UV. The biochemical rejection of the hypothesis
- coincided with the re-start of the epidemiological studies. Most of these are simply latitude studies and
- are no more than a repeat of what was available sixty years ago. They do not help to find a cause. <strong
- >Two studies showed that cataract was less common at higher altitude in the Himalayas, but unfortunately led
- to opposing conclusions</strong>. On the basis of common knowledge that UV exposure was greater at
- higher altitude, the first altitude study led to the rejection of the sunlight hypothesis."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Anticataract action of vitamin E: its estimation using an in vitro steroid cataract model," Ohta Y; Okada
- H; Majima Y; Ishiguro I Ophthalmic Res, 1996, 28 Suppl 2:, 16-25 "The aim of this study was to estimate the
- anticataract action of vitamin E using an in vitro methylprednisolone (MP)-induced cataract model. The same
- severity of early cortical cataract was induced in lenses isolated from male Wistar rats aged 6 weeks by
- incubation with MP (1.5 mg/ml) in TC-199 medium. The cataractous lenses showed slight increases in lipid
- peroxide (LPO) content and Na+/K+ ratio and slight decreases in reduced glutathione (GSH) content and
- glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAP-DH), a sensitive index of oxidative stress, and
- Na+,K(+)-ATPase activities. When the cataractous lenses were further incubated in TC-199 medium with and
- without vitamin E (250 micrograms/ml) for 48 h, the progression of cataract was prevented in the vitamin
- E-treated lenses, but not in the vitamin E-untreated lenses. The vitamin E-untreated lenses showed a
- decrease in vitamin E content and an increase in water content in addition to further increases in LPO
- content and Na+/K+ ratio and further decreases in GSH content and GAP-DH and Na+,K(+)-ATPase activities. In
- contrast, the changes of these components and enzymes except for GSH were attenuated in the vitamin
- E-treated lenses. From these results, it can be estimated that vitamin E prevents in vitro cataractogenesis
- in rat lenses treated with MP by protecting the lenses against oxidative damage and loss of membrane
- function. "
- </p>
- <p>
- "Prevention of oxidative damage to rat lens by pyruvate in vitro: possible attenuation in vivo," Varma SD;
- Ramachandran S; Devamanoharan PS; Morris SM; Ali AH,.Curr Eye Res, 1995 Aug, 14:8, 643-9 "Studies have been
- conducted to assess the possible preventive effect of pyruvate against lens protein oxidation and consequent
- denaturation and insolubilization. Rat lens organ culture system was used for these studies. The content of
- water insoluble proteins (urea soluble) increased if the lenses were cultured in medium containing hydrogen
- peroxide. Incorporation of pyruvate in the medium prevented such insolubilization. The insolubilization was
- associated primarily with loss of gamma crystallin fraction of the soluble proteins. PAGE analysis
- demonstrated that insolubilization is related to -S-S- bond formation which was preventable by pyruvate.
- Since pyruvate is a normal tissue metabolite the findings are considered pathophysiologically significant
- against cataract formation. This was apparent by the <strong>prevention of selenite cataract in vivo by
- intraperitoneal administration of pyruvate.</strong>"
- </p>
-
- <p>
- "Glucocorticoid-induced cataract in chick embryo monitored by Raman spectroscopy," Mizuno A; Nishigori H;
- Iwatsuru M Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 30:1, 132-7, 1989. "Glucocorticoid-induced cataract lens in chick
- embryo was monitored by laser Raman spectroscopy. The lens opacity that appeared in chick embryo is a
- reversible one. Raman spectra show no significant change in the relative content of water or secondary
- structure of the proteins upon lens opacification. The intensity ratios of tyrosine doublet bands in Raman
- spectra between clear and opaque lens portions are changes. <strong>
- This change is reversible,
- </strong>and <strong>is interpreted as a protein-water phase separation that occurred during lens
- opacification</strong>."
- </p>
- <p>
- "[NMR study of the state of water in the human lens during cataract development]" Babizhaev MA; Deev AI;
- Nikolaev GM, Biofizika 30:4, 671-4,1985. "Water proton spin-spin relaxation times (T2) and the content of
- bound, "non-freezable" at -9 degrees C water in both normal human lenses and human lenses of different
- stages of cataract progression (cataracta incipiens, nondum matura, mature hypermatura) were measured by NMR
- spin echoes method. By the stage of cataracta nondum matura, increase of bound water content and
- simultaneous, almost half decrease of the relaxation time (T2), were observed. However, on the following
- stages of cataract evaluation (almost mature, mature cataracts) <strong>a gradual decrease of bound water
- content is noted,
- </strong>but only for the mature cataract stage the water content significantly differs from that of the
- normal one. On the stage of hypermature cataract the presence of two unexchanged with each other fractions
- of water is found. The obtained data are <strong>explained by lens protein reconstructions during the
- cataract progression.</strong>"
- </p>
- <p>
- Hightower KR; Reddy VN "Ca++-induced cataract." Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1982 Feb, 22:2, 263-7 "Cataracts
- in cultured rabbit lenses were produced by elevation of internal calcium. Experimental procedures were
- successful in increasing levels of total and bound Ca++, often without significant changes in sodium,
- potassium, or water content. Although the excess in calcium was predominantly associated with water-soluble
- proteins and was freely diffusible, a significant amount was bound to membranes and cytosol water-insoluble
- proteins. Thus, in lenses with a 10-fold increase in total Ca++, the bound Ca++ increased twofold, nearly
- 35% of which remained fixed to water-insoluble and membrane proteins after exhaustive (72 hr) dialysis. In
- contrast, over 95% of the Ca++ in water-soluble protein fractions was removed by dialysis."
- </p>
- <p>
- [Use of pyrimidine bases and ATP for conservative treatment of early cataracts] Larionov LN Oftalmol Zh,
- 1977, 32:3, 221-2.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Noninvasive measurements of pyridine nucleotide and flavoprotein in the lens," Tsubota K; Laing RA; Kenyon
- KR Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 28:5, 785-9, 1987. "<strong>Abnormalities in glucose metabolism are thought to
- be among the main causes of cataract formation.
- </strong>
- The authors have made noninvasive biochemical measurements of the lens that provide information concerning
- glucose metabolism in the lens epithelium. The autofluorescence of reduced pyridine nucleotides (PN) and
- oxidized flavoproteins (Fp) within the rabbit lens were noninvasively measured as a function of depth using
- redox fluorometry. The peak of the autofluorescence at 440 nm (excited at 360 nm) and 540 nm <strong
- >(excited at 460 nm) were determined at the lens epithelium. When 8 mM sodium pentobarbital, a known
- inhibitor of mitochondrial respiration, was applied to the lens, the autofluorescence peak at 440 nm
- increased and that at 540 nm decreased. The 440 nm autofluorescence is thought to be from
- </strong>
-
- reduced pyridine nucleotides, whereas the 540 nm autofluorescence is from the oxidized flavoprotein.
- Blocking lens respiration with pentobarbital caused an increase in the PN/Fp ratio by a factor of 3 within
- 3.5 hr after pentobarbital application."
- </p>
- <p>
- <hr />
- <strong>
- high levels of L-lactate and high ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous</strong>. 2.
- Immature cataractous lenses with anterior capsular/subcapsular opacity; intermediate levels of RTP,
- intermediate values for the sums of RTP, RDP, and AMP, <strong>high L-lactate levels, and intermediate
- values of the ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- "Lipid fluorophores of the human crystalline lens with cataract," Babizhayev MA Graefes Arch Clin Exp
- Ophthalmol, 1989, 227:4, 384-91. [Initial stages of cataracts are characterized by the fluorescence of the
- products of fatty acid free radical oxidation.]
- </p>
-
- <p>© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com</p>
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