Head Region (head + region)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Mediolateral intercalation in planarians revealed by grafting experiments

DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Issue 2 2003
Yumi Saito
Abstract We investigated how planarians organize their left,right axis by using ectopic grafting. Planarians have three body axes: anteroposterior (A-P), dorsoventral (D-V), and left,right (L-R). When a small piece is implanted into an ectopic region along the A-P and D-V axes, intercalary structures are always formed to compensate for positional gaps. There are two hypotheses regarding L-R axis formation in this organism: first, that the left and right sides of the animal may be recognized as different parts, and L-R intercalation can induce midline structures (asymmetry hypothesis); second, that both sides may have symmetrical positional values, and mediolateral (M-L) intercalation creates positional values along the L-R axis (symmetry hypothesis). We performed ectopic grafting experiments in the head region of the planarian, Dugesia japonica, to examine these hypotheses. A left lateral fragment containing a left auricle was implanted into the medial region of the host. Ectopic structures were always formed only on the left side of the graft, where lateral tissues abutted onto the medial tissues. However, no morphologic change was induced on the right side of the graft, where left-sided tissues faced onto right-sided tissues. Molecular marker analyses indicated that ectopic structures formed on the left side of the graft were induced by M-L intercalation, supporting the "symmetry hypothesis." When the midline tissues were implanted into a lateral region, they induced a complete ectopic head, demonstrating that M-L intercalation may be sufficient to establish the L-R axis in planarians. Developmental Dynamics 226:334,340, 2003.© 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Cell fate and timing in the evolution of neural crest and mesoderm development in the head region of amphibians and lungfishes

ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 2009
Rolf Ericsson
Abstract Our research on the evolution of head development focuses on understanding the developmental origins of morphological innovations and involves asking questions like: How flexible (or conserved) are cell fates, patterns of cell migration or the timing of developmental events (heterochrony)? How do timing changes, or changes in life history affect head development and growth? Our ,model system' is a comparison between lungfishes and representatives from all three extant groups of amphibians. Within anuran amphibians, major changes in life history such as the repeated evolution of larval specializations (e.g. carnivory), or indeed the loss of a free-swimming larva, allows us to test for developmental constraints. Cell migration and cell fate are conserved in cranial neural crest cells in all vertebrates studied so far. Patterning and developmental anatomy of cranial neural crest and head mesoderm cells are conserved within amphibians and even between birds, mammals and amphibians. However, the specific formation of hypobranchial muscles from ventral somitic processes shows variation within tetrapods. The evolution of carnivorous larvae in terminal taxa is correlated with changes in both pattern and timing of head skeletal and muscle development. Sequence-heterochronic changes are correlated with feeding mode in terminal taxa and with phylogenetic relatedness in basal branches of the phylogeny. Eye muscles seem to form a developmental module that can evolve relatively independently from other head muscles, at least in terms of timing of muscle differentiation. [source]


Ultrastructure of spermatozoa of lizards in the genus Mabuya from Central Brazil

ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 1 2009
S. M. De Sá Mandel
Abstract This is the first description of spermatozoal ultrastructure of Mabuya skinks. The spermatozoa of the species studied are filiform, consisting of a head region, a midpiece and a tail. The head is characterized by the following features: a depressed acrosome anteriorly, an acrosome vesicle divided into cortex and medulla, paracrystalline subacrosomal material, a pointed tip perforatorium, a circular perforatorium base plate inside the subacrosomal cone, an epinuclear lucent zone separated from the subacrosomal cone by a membrane, a large nuclear rostrum, and round nuclear shoulders. The midpiece presents a bilateral stratified laminar structure, a distal centriole, peripheral fibres 3 and 8 grossly enlarged, columnar mitochondria with linear cristae, dense body rings and a triangular annulus. Finally, the tail is composed of a principal piece and an end piece. An axoneme and a fibrous sheath characterize the principal piece, and the end piece is formed only by an axoneme, which loses its pattern in the last portion. Comparisons with members of Teiidae revealed differences in the numbers of dense rings. A well-developed epinuclear lucent zone in Mabuya is less prominent among teiids. In the spermatozoa of Mabuya, the first ring of dense bodies is very large, uniquely resembling the condition present in snakes. [source]


Biochemical and functional characterization of the interaction between pentraxin 3 and C1q

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 2 2003

Abstract Pentraxin 3 (PTX3) is a recently characterized member of the pentraxin family of acute-phase proteins produced during inflammation. Classical short pentraxins, C-reactive protein, and serum amyloid P component can bind to C1q and thereby activate the classical complement pathway. Since PTX3 can also bind C1q, the present study was designed to define the interaction between PTX3 and C1q and to examine the functional consequences of this interaction. A dose-dependent binding of both C1q and the C1 complex to PTX3 was observed. Experiments with recombinant globular head domains of human C1q A, B, and C chains indicated that C1q interacts with PTX3 via its globular head region. Binding of C1q to immobilized PTX3 induced activation of the classical complement pathway as assessed by C4 deposition. Furthermore, PTX3 enhanced C1q binding and complement activation on apoptotic cells. However, in the fluid-phase, pre-incubation of PTX3 with C1q resulted in inhibition of complement activation by blocking the interaction of C1q with immunoglobulins. These results indicate that PTX3 can both inhibit and activate the classical complement pathway by binding C1q, depending on the way it is presented. PTX3 may therefore be involved in the regulation of the innate immune response. [source]


Early evolution of a homeobox gene: the parahox gene Gsx in the Cnidaria and the Bilateria

EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 4 2003
John R. Finnerty
Summary Homeobox transcription factors are commonly involved in developmental regulation in diverse eukaryotes, including plants, animals, and fungi. The origin of novel homeobox genes is thought to have contributed to many evolutionary innovations in animals. We perform a molecular phylogenetic analysis of cnox2, the best studied homeobox gene from the phylum Cnidaria, a very ancient lineage of animals. Among three competing hypotheses, our analysis decisively favors the hypothesis that cnox2 is orthologous to the gsx gene of Bilateria, thereby establishing the existence of this specific homeobox gene in the eumetazoan stem lineage, some 650,900 million years ago. We assayed the expression of gsx in the planula larva and polyp of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis using in situ hybridization and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. The gsx ortholog of Nematostella, known as anthox2, is expressed at high levels in the posterior planula and the corresponding "head" region of the polyp. It cannot be detected in the anterior planula or the corresponding "foot" region of the polyp. We have attempted to reconstruct the evolution of gsx spatiotemporal expression in cnidarians and bilaterians using a phylogenetic framework. Because of the surprisingly high degree of variability in gsx expression within the Cnidaria, it is currently not possible to infer unambiguously the ancestral cnidarian condition or the ancestral eumetazoan condition for gsx expression. [source]


Cot mattresses as reservoirs of potentially harmful bacteria and the sudden infant death syndrome

FEMS IMMUNOLOGY & MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2004
Richard E. Sherburn
Abstract Cot mattress materials were investigated as potential reservoirs of bacteria in relation to the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). The sleeping position of the infant significantly influenced bacterial population density of cot mattress polyurethane foams (p<0.0000001) and their covers (p<0.004). Staphylococcus aureus was isolated at significantly higher frequency (p<0.03) from the infant's head region of cot mattress materials. Significantly higher bacterial population densities (p<0.001) were associated with polyurethane foams from non-integral mattresses (exposed polyurethane foam), when compared to those from mattresses completely covered by polyvinyl chloride (integral type mattress). The frequency of isolation of S. aureus from polyurethane foams from non-integral mattresses was also significantly higher (p=0.03) than from foams from the integral type. The following factors were significantly associated with increased frequency of isolation of S. aureus: from the polyurethane foam, previous use of non-integral mattresses by another child (p=0.03 for all sample sites, p=0.01 for torso region); from the covers, sleeping in the prone position (p=0.003 head region, p=0.001 torso region). Prone sleeping was also significantly associated with increased bacterial population levels (p=0.01) and increased frequency of isolation of Escherichia coli (p=0.02) from the torso region of cot mattress covers. These findings could explain some recently identified risk factors for SIDS associated with type and previous use of cot mattresses. Clostridium perfringens was isolated at very low frequency and Streptococcus pyogenes was not isolated from any cot mattress materials tested. [source]


Prognostic value of p27kip1 expression in adenocarcinoma of the pancreatic head region

HPB, Issue 3 2006
Jerzy Mielko
Abstract Background. p27kip1 is a tumour suppressor gene, functioning as a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, and an independent prognostic factor in breast, colon, and prostate adenocarcinomas. Conflicting data are reported for adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. The aim of this study was to establish the prognostic value of p27kip1 expression in adenocarcinoma of the pancreatic head region. Patients and methods. The study included 45 patients (male/female ratio 2:1; mean age 59, range 38,82 years) with adenocarcinomas of the pancreatic head region: 24 , pancreatic head, 18 , periampullary and 3 , uncinate process. The patients underwent the Kausch-Whipple pancreatoduodenectomy (n=39), pylorus-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy (n=5), or nearly total pancreatectomy (n=1). Eight patients received adjuvant chemotherapy postoperatively. Follow-up time ranged from 3 to 60 months. Tumours were staged according to the pTNM classification (UICC 1997). Immunohistochemistry was done on paraffin-embedded blocks from tumour sections. Quantitative determination of p27kip1 expression was based on the proportion of p27kip1 -positive cells (< 5%= negative). Survival analysis was carried out using the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox regression model. Results. Positive p27kip1 expression was detected in 22 tumours (49%), whereas 23 tumours (51%) were p27kip1 -negative. There were no significant correlations between p27kip1 index and stage or lymph node involvement. Median survival time in patients with p27kip1 -positive tumours was 19 months, whereas in patients with p27kip1 -negative tumours it was 18 months (p=0.53). A significant relationship was found between p27kip1 -negative tumours and radical resection (p=0.04). Multivariate survival analysis revealed that the localization of the tumour (pancreatic head/uncinate process vs periampullary) was the only significant and independent prognosticator (p=0.01, Cox regression model). Resection margins involvement and grade remained nearly significant prognostic factors (p=0.07 and p=0.09, respectively). Conclusion. We conclude that p27kip1 has limited overall prognostic utility in resected carcinoma of the pancreatic head region, but its potential role as a marker of residual disease needs to be further assessed. [source]


Phenotypic variation among populations of Atherinops affinis(Atherinopsidae) with insights from a geometric morphometric analysis

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2004
K. M. O'Reilly
Morphological character variation was examined in Atherinops affinis, a temperate marine silverside with a broad geographic range and presumed limited powers of dispersal. Populations of this species were sampled from three California mainland sites, one Channel Island site and one site in the upper Gulf of California. A geometric morphometric analysis yielded higher resolution in the assessment of phenotypic divergence among the four Pacific coast populations than either body measurement or meristic analysis, and it showed that most of the shape variation among these populations occurs in the head region and body depth of the fish. All three analyses supported the hypothesis that populations of A. affinis from central and southern California coastal waters and from Santa Catalina Island are morphologically distinct from each other; the Santa Catalina Island population was found to be the most divergent. On the basis of meristic characters alone, the population of A. affinis from the upper Gulf of California was different from A. affinis populations along the Pacific coast of California. The analyses revealed variation in several morphological characters, e.g. body depth and meristics, known to vary in association with environmental conditions. Given that A. affinis appears to have low among-population genetic variation, this species may be phenotypically plastic in response to the environmental conditions of the habitat of each population. [source]


Microhabitat selection of Gyrodactylus salaris Malmberg on different salmonids

JOURNAL OF FISH DISEASES, Issue 12 2007
R D Heinecke
Abstract The microhabitat selection of the ectoparasite Gyrodactylus salaris (Lærdalselva strain, Norway) was investigated concurrently with studies on the parasite population growth on five strains of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., and a strain of Danish rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum). The salmon used were hatchery-reared parr of East Atlantic strains [River Conon (Scotland), River Storå (western Denmark) and River Ätran (western Sweden)] and Baltic strains [Lule and Ume (eastern Sweden)]. The location and numbers of parasites were recorded on anaesthetized fish once a week from week 0 to week 8. The mean abundance of G. salaris steadily increased to high levels on the River Conon, Storå and Ätran strains until the end of the experiment. The mean abundance of G. salaris on the two Baltic strains (River Lule älv and River Ume älv) initially increased but after 4,7 weeks the growth of the parasite infrapopulations decreased markedly. The Danish rainbow trout strain showed the lowest abundances of all the fish species and strains. Gyrodactylus salaris preferentially selected the fins and head region when colonising the hosts (all species and strains). Increasing percentages of G. salaris on the tail fins of the East Atlantic strains and rainbow trout were found during the course of infection, whereas the two Baltic salmon strains experienced a decreasing percentage of parasites in this microhabitat. [source]


Identifying mammalian predators from bite marks: a tool for focusing wildlife protection

MAMMAL REVIEW, Issue 1 2000
P. O'B.
ABSTRACT Dead Sooty Shearwater, Puffinus griseus, chicks and adults were collected from seven colonies on South Island, New Zealand in the 1993,96 breeding seasons. An estimated 97% of 118 deaths were from predation. Thirty-four definite predator bite pairs were identified on 27 carcasses. Twenty-one (78%) of the carcasses had bite pairs with intercanine distances < 9.5 mm which suggests that Stoats (Mustela erminea) were the principal predators. One chick was killed by a feral House Cat (Felis catus), and it is likely that feral Ferrets (M. furo) were responsible for a proportion of the deaths. Nearly three quarters of definite Stoat bite pairs were identified in the head region. The analyses of bite marks offers cheap and statistically reliable identification of predators provided carcasses are collected fresh and flesh is removed to examine tooth punctures in bone. [source]


Cell Subpopulation-related Volumetric Parameters: a Complementary Tool of the Modified Hypo-osmotic Swelling Test on Model of Boar Spermatozoa

REPRODUCTION IN DOMESTIC ANIMALS, Issue 5 2000
A. Petrounkina
Content It is a general property of the intact animal cell to swell rapidly in response to hypo-osmotic conditions. The modified hypo-osmotic swelling test (HOS-test) is an indicative test to evaluate the integrity of the plasma membrane by means of an electronic cell counter, based on the relative increase of the cell volume in response to hypo-osmotic conditions. In this study the relationships between the osmotically induced changes of the cell volume of boar spermatozoa as determined by cell counter and the integrity of the membrane as determined by propidium iodide staining (PI) were studied. Boar sperm cell volume distributions were measured under iso-osmotic (300 mosmolar) conditions and after a hypo-osmotic stress (150 mosmolar). The relative volume shift of mean and modal volume were calculated as a proportion coefficient of modal and mean values of the cell volume distributions by transition from iso-osmotic to hypo-osmotic conditions. The volumetric parameters related to the different cell subpopulations were derived from the different peaks of cell volume distributions. PI-staining techniques were used for comparison. The values of the volume shift and of derived percentages of the osmotically inactive cells were correlated negatively and positively, respectively (p < 0.05) with the percentage of the PI-stained cells. This correlation indicates that a relationship exists between membrane functions of the different cell compartments (sperm head and tail) due to the circumstance that the increase of the cell volume in the HOS-test is associated with the morphological changes in the tail and the PI-staining is associated with the membrane integrity and permeability of the head region. The advantage of computer-assisted volume measurement is that a large number of cells (5000,50 000 spermatozoa) can be measured and evaluated during one procedure and in a very short time. The relative volume shift is a quantitative continuous parameter characterizing the osmotic reactivity and membrane functional competence of a cell population and of subpopulations within one ejaculate. This parameter could be useful to evaluate membrane functional competence rapidly and sensitively. Inhalt Es ist eine generelle Eigenschaft membranintakter tierischer Zellen, mit einer Volumenzunahme auf eine hypoosmotische Belastung zu reagieren. Der auf der relativen Vergrößierungdes Zellvolumens basierende modifizierte hypoosmotischeSchwelltest ist ein indikativer Test zur Beurteilung der Membranintegrität mittels eines elektronischen Partikelzählers. In dieser Studie wurden die Zusammenhänge zwischen der mittels der Propidiumjodid-Färbung bestimmten Zellmembranintegrität und den osmotisch induzierten Veränderungen des Zellvolumens von Eberspermien untersucht. Volumenverteilungen von Eberspermien wurden unter isoosmotischen (300 mosmolar) und hypoosmotischen (150 mosmolar) Bedingungen gemessen. Die relative Volumenverschiebung der modalen und mittleren Werte der Volumenverteilung wurde als Quotient aus Modalwerten der Zellvolumenverteilungen und des mittleren Zellvolumens beim Übergang von isotonen zu hypotonen Bedingungen berechnet. Die auf verschiedene Subpopulationen bezogenen volumetrischen Parameter werden aus den originalen Volumenverteilungen berechnet. Der Betrag der Zellvolumenzunahme und die aus den Volumenverteilungen bestimmten Anteile an Zellen mit beschädigter Geißielmembran korrelierten signifikant negativ bzw. positiv (p < 0,05) mit dem Anteil an den Zellen mit beschädigter Kopfmembran, der sich aus der Propidiumjodid-Färbung ergab. Es wird geschlossen, daßi im Verhalten zwischen den Membranen der verschiedenen Zellkompartimente (Spermienkopf und-Geißiel) ein Zusammenhang besteht. Die beschriebene Methode ermöglicht die Analyse großier Zellpopulationen (5.000,50.000 Zellen). Die relative Volumenverschiebung stellt einen quantitativen kontinuierlichen Parameter dar, der den Membranzustand der Eberspermien einer Spermatozoenpopulation und Subpopulationen innerhalb eines Ejakulates charakterisiert. Diese Parameter können zur schnellen und sensitiven Beurteilung der Membranzustandes eingesetzt werden. [source]


Brain damage in pigs produced by impact with a nonpenetrating captive bolt pistol

AUSTRALIAN VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue 3 2003
JW FINNIE
Objective To assess the effect of impact with a nonpene-trating captive bolt pistol in pigs by studying the resulting traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to compare the pathological changes with those found previously in the brains of sheep using a similar experimental paradigm. Procedure The unrestrained heads of six, anaesthetised, 7- to 8-week-old, Large White pigs were impacted in the temporal region with a nonpenetrating captive bolt pistol. Four hours postimpact, brains were perfusion-fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde. Coronal sections from six levels along the brain were cut and stained with haematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemically for amyloid precursor protein, a sensitive marker of axonal injury (AI) in the brain after trauma. Results TBI in pigs was characterised only by very mild AI, whereas AI in sheep after captive bolt impact to the same head region was much more severe and widely distributed and often associated with vascular damage such as contusions, subarachnoid and intraparenchymal haemorrhage. Conclusions TBI in pigs was much less severe than in sheep after non-penetrating mechanical impact of similar magnitude, confirming the importance of interspecies differences in determining an appropriate physical method of euthanasia. [source]


Effects of gestational exposure to 1.95-GHz W-CDMA signals for IMT-2000 cellular phones: Lack of embryotoxicity and teratogenicity in rats

BIOELECTROMAGNETICS, Issue 3 2009
Kumiko Ogawa
Abstract The present study was designed to evaluate whether gestational exposure to an EMF targeting the head region, similar to that from cellular phones, might affect embryogenesis in rats. A 1.95-GHz wide-band code division multiple access (W-CDMA) signal, which is one applied for the International Mobile Telecommunication 2000 (IMT-2000) system and used for the freedom of mobile multimedia access (FOMA), was employed for exposure to the heads of four groups of pregnant CD(SD) IGS rats (20 per group) for gestational days 7,17. The exposure was performed for 90 min/day in the morning. The spatial average specific absorption rate (SAR) for individual brains was designed to be 0.67 and 2.0 W/kg with peak brain SARs of 3.1 and 7.0 W/kg for low (group 3) and high (group 4) exposures, respectively, and a whole-body average SAR less than 0.4 W/kg so as not to cause thermal effects due to temperature elevation. Control and sham exposure groups were also included. At gestational day 20, all dams were killed and fetuses were taken out by cesarean section. There were no differences in maternal body weight gain. No adverse effects of EMF exposure were observed on any reproductive and embryotoxic parameters such as number of live (243,271 fetuses), dead or resorbed embryos, placental weights, sex ratios, weights or external, visceral or skeletal abnormalities of live fetuses. Bioelectromagnetics 30:205,212, 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Hypersensitivity symptoms associated with exposure to cellular telephones: No causal link

BIOELECTROMAGNETICS, Issue 4 2002
Maila Hietanen
Abstract The hypothesis that there exist hypersensitive persons who perceive subjective symptoms from radiofrequency (RF) fields emitted by hand held mobile phones (cellular phones) was tested using double blind provocation experiments. We also tested whether sensitive subjects are able to determine whether the phone is on or off by sensing RF fields. The study group consisted of 20 volunteers (13 women and 7 men) who reported themselves as being sensitive to cellular phones. The RF exposure sources were one analogue NMT phone (900 MHz) and two digital GSM phones (900 and 1800 MHz). The duration of a test session was 30 min, and three or four sessions were performed in random order for each subject during 1 day. The subjects were asked to report symptoms or sensations as soon as they perceived any abnormal feelings. In addition, the subjects' blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing frequency were monitored every 5 min. The results of the study indicated that various symptoms were reported, and most of them appeared in the head region. However, the number of reported symptoms was higher during sham exposure than during real exposure conditions. In addition, none of the test persons could distinguish real RF exposure from sham exposure. Hence, we conclude that adverse subjective symptoms or sensations, though unquestionably perceived by the test subjects, were not produced by cellular phones. Bioelectromagnetics 23:264,270, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Inferring adaptation within shape diversity of the humerus of subterranean rodent Ctenomys

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 2 2010
FRANCISCO STEINER-SOUZA
In subterranean rodents of the genus Ctenomys, excavation activity can be carried out with the claws and forelimbs (scratch-digging) as well as with the skull and incisor teeth (skull-tooth digging). Within the forelimb myoskeletal system, the humerus is a main bone concentrating a large number of muscles and bearing tensions during excavation. The genus Ctenomys is considered primarily a scratch-digger and secondarily a skull-tooth digger. We analysed the humerus (N = 165) of four species of Ctenomys from southern Brazil, in areas ranging from the soft soils of the first lines of coastal dunes (Ctenomys flamarioni, Ctenomys minutus), through the sandy fields of the coastal plains (Ctenomys minutus, Ctenomys lami), on to the hard soils of the southern pampas ,gaúchos' fields (Ctenomys torquatus). The differences in the form (size + shape) were quantified using geometric morphometrics methods and interpreted in the light of myological descriptions. As expected from a phylogenetic and ecological point of view, C. flamarioni had the most divergent shape and larger size among the species analysed, showing a more slender humerus, especially in the head region, than C. lami, C. minutus, and C. torquatus. Crossing the osteology data with the qualitative observations of the musculature, it was possible to detect large differences in the proximal portion of the humerus that could be related to the insertion of important extension muscles of the pectoral,shoulder joints, which could increase force. The comparison of shape differences between the three closely-related species (C. lami, C. minutus, and C. torquatus) revealed unexpected patterns because C. lami was the species phenetically more distant from C. flamarioni and not C. torquatus as expected from ecological data and phylogenetic relationships. A two-step adaptive path to humeral shapes better fit to digging is postulated where the deltoid crest and epicondylar crest increases precede an articular surface area increase. The absence of sexual dimorphism in C. torquatus is discussed with regard to the optimal size required to dig in hard soils. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 100, 353,367. [source]


2453: Optic disc in the picture: novel imaging techniques

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2010
W DREXLER
Purpose Advances in light sources and detection technologies enabled a paradigm shift in retinal OCT imaging performance. ,Snap-shot OCT' enabling isotropic sampling over 512x512x1024 voxels with 600 frames/second in less than a second is now possible. Methods The resolution advantage in conjunction with full volumetric sampling has enabled the development of more informative indices of axonal damage in glaucoma compared with measurements of RNFL thickness and cup to disc ratio provided by other devices. A novel mapping method was developed, the three-dimensional minimal distance (3D-MDM) as the optical correlate of true retinal nerve fiber layer thickness around the optic nerve head region. In a preliminary study relation between the cross-sectional areas of the retinal nerve fiber layer and the optic nerve was found to be a sensitive measure of axon loss. Results In addition to all the major layers of the retina, the entire choroid down to the lamina cribrosa and sclera can now be visualized. This enables unprecedented information about choroidal vasculature without any contrast agents, choroidal thickness and will enable quantification of choroidal blood flow in the near future. Furthermore this technique allows tissue to be imaged in vitro with an image resolution better than 1-2 µm, allowing to image single cells and detect pre-apoptotic signatures using OCT. RGC-5 cells were imaged using a sampling rate 1024x512x1024 voxel at 800 nm central wavelength and a bandwidth of 230 nm, enabling the detection of optical signatures at different pre-stages of programmed cell death. Conclusion Significantly increased OCT imaging speed and tissue penetration might enable novel insights and diagnostic opportunities in the diagnosis and therapy monitoring of glaucoma. Commercial interest [source]