Mean visual acuity (± S.E.M.) of the transplanted eye versus control sham - injected eye and non-transplanted
dystrophic eye.
Not exact matches
We used the head - tracking response to assess the visual function of RCS
dystrophic rats 13 weeks after receiving a subretinal iPS - RPE transplantation in one
eye only (Fig. 6 and Movies S2 and S3).
Conservation of visual acuity in the iPS - RPE transplanted
eyes was associated with the preservation of photoreceptors in the host outer nuclear layer (ONL — Fig. 7A), identified by the expression of rhodopsin in the outer segments of photoreceptors (Fig. 7A inset,
Dystrophic + transplant).
iPS - RPE cells were transplanted into
dystrophic RCS rat
eyes at three weeks of age, a time when retinal abnormalities are first observed.
A head - tracking response is observed in the
dystrophic RCS rat during optokinetic testing of the left
eye, 13 weeks after iPS - RPE cell transplantation.
No head - tracking response is observed in the 16 - week old
dystrophic RCS rat during optokinetic testing of the right, non-transplanted,
eye.