Dy. Yu et al., INTRARETINAL OXYGEN DISTRIBUTION AND CHOROIDAL REGULATION IN THE AVASCULAR RETINA OF GUINEA-PIGS, American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology, 39(3), 1996, pp. 965-973
O-2-sensitive microelectrodes were used to measure PO2 as a function o
f depth through the retina and choroid of anesthetized and artificiall
y ventilated guinea pigs. The guinea pig retina is of particular inter
est, because it has a typically mammalian structure but no retinal cir
culation; it relies totally on choroidal delivery of O-2 and other nut
rients. Measurements of intraretinal O-2 distribution in an avascular
mammalian retina have not previously been reported. Under normal venti
lation conditions, PO2 decreased monotonically from the choroid (33.6
+/- 2.9 mmHg, n = 11) to near zero (0.4 +/- 0.1 mmHg) at the retina-vi
treous boundary. The inner half of the retina had an average PO2 of on
ly 0.6 +/- 0.1 mmHg. Stepwise increases in inspired O-2 (from 20 to 40
to 60 to 80 to 100%) had surprisingly little effect on choroidal PO2.
Rapid changes (20-100%) produced overshoot-type responses in the chor
oid before recovery to levels only slightly above those found in normo
xia. This indicates the presence of an active O-2-regulatory mechanism
in the guinea pig choroid. Addition of CO2 (5%) to O-2 ventilation ap
peared to break down this control mechanism and led to dramatic and su
stained increases in PO2 throughout the retina and choroid. The demons
tration of an O-2-regulating mechanism in the guinea pig choroid that
maintains choroidal PO2 well below that in the systemic arterial blood
, coupled with the observation of very low O-2 levels throughout the i
nner retina, suggests that the O-2 requirement of the inner retina in
the guinea pig is small and that O-2 levels in the choroid are deliber
ately constrained.