JOURNAL ARTICLE

El libro mágico: o el arte de crear nuestros cuentos

María Esther Liroz Martínez

Year: 1997 Journal:   Cuadernos de pedagogía Vol: 15 (258)Pages: 14-17

Abstract

The retina has been increasingly investigated as a site of Alzheimer's disease (AD) manifestation for over a decade. Early reports documented degeneration of retinal ganglion cells and their axonal projections. Our group provided the first evidence of the key pathological hallmarks of AD, amyloid β-protein (Aβ) plaques including vascular Aβ deposits, in the retina of AD and mild cognitively impaired (MCI) patients. Subsequent studies validated these findings and further identified electroretinography and vision deficits, retinal (p)tau and inflammation, intracellular Aβ accumulation, and retinal ganglion cell-subtype degeneration surrounding Aβ plaques in these patients. Our data suggest that the brain and retina follow a similar trajectory during AD progression, probably due to their common embryonic origin and anatomical proximity. However, the retina is the only CNS organ feasible for direct, repeated, and non-invasive ophthalmic examination with ultra-high spatial resolution and sensitivity. Neurovascular unit integrity is key to maintaining normal CNS function and cerebral vascular abnormalities are increasingly recognized as early and pivotal factors driving cognitive impairment in AD. Likewise, retinal vascular abnormalities such as changes in vessel density and fractal dimensions, blood flow, foveal avascular zone, curvature tortuosity, and arteriole-to-venule ratio were described in AD patients including early-stage cases. A rapidly growing number of reports have suggested that cerebral and retinal vasculopathy are tightly associated with cognitive deficits in AD patients and animal models. Importantly, we recently identified early and progressive deficiency in retinal vascular platelet-derived growth factor receptor-β (PDGFRβ) expression and pericyte loss that were associated with retinal vascular amyloidosis and cerebral amyloid angiopathy in MCI and AD patients. Other studies utilizing optical coherence tomography (OCT), retinal amyloid-fluorescence imaging and retinal hyperspectral imaging have made significant progress in visualizing and quantifying AD pathology through the retina. With new advances in OCT angiography, OCT leakage, scanning laser microscopy, fluorescein angiography and adaptive optics imaging, future studies focusing on retinal vascular AD pathologies could transform non-invasive pre-clinical AD diagnosis and monitoring.

Keywords:
Art Humanities

Metrics

0
Cited By
0.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
4
Refs
0.01
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Topics

Literacy and Educational Practices
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Education
Comparative Literary Analysis and Criticism
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Literature and Literary Theory
Literature, Culture, and Aesthetics
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Museology

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Nuestros cuentos

Willis Knapp Jones

Journal:   Books Abroad Year: 1956 Vol: 30 (3)Pages: 322-322
BOOK-CHAPTER

13 Arte Mágico

Hope MacLean

University of Texas Press eBooks Year: 2011 Pages: 214-220
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Arte en nuestros templos

José Crisanto López Jiménez

Journal:   Anales del Centro de Cultura Valenciana Year: 1959 Vol: 149 (43)Pages: 1-29
JOURNAL ARTICLE

O SIGILO MÁGICO NA ARTE CONTEMPORÂNEA

Lucas Fier

Journal:   O Mosaico Year: 2023 Vol: 16 (1)
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Libro-forum: descubrimos a nuestros abuelos

María del Carmen Pereira Domínguez

Journal:   Revista Padres y Maestros / Journal of Parents and Teachers Year: 1994 Vol: 44 (198)Pages: 10-13
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.