Retinal hemorrhages associated with in utero exposure to cocaine. Experimental and clinical findings. 1996

A Silva-Araújo, and M A Tavares, and M H Patacao, and R M Carolino
Institute for Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Porto, Portugal.

BACKGROUND The use of drugs of abuse--e.g., cocaine--during pregnancy has been associated with abnormalities of the visual system. The authors studied the effects of prenatal exposure to drugs of abuse, especially cocaine, on the vascular system of the retina in newborn infants and in an experimental model in the rat. METHODS The animal study was conducted in pregnant Wistar rats injected subcutaneously with cocaine hydrochloride (60 mg/kg body weight/day) from gestation days 8 to 22. Male offspring were killed at postnatal days 7, 14, and 30 and perfused with fixative, and the retinas were dissected and processed for microscopic observation. The ophthalmologic observations were conducted in a population of newborn infants born to women who abused many drugs during pregnancy and in a control group of women with no history of illicit drug use. RESULTS Vascular disruptive lesions were seen after prenatal exposure to cocaine in the rat: round intraretinal hemorrhages, ischemic and hypoperfused areas located at the temporal part and often extending from the posterior pole to the periphery of the retina. The ophthalmologic observation of the newborns showed a higher incidence of vascular disruptive lesions in infants in whom exposure to drugs of abuse was affirmative during pregnancy. In the cases in which cocaine consumption was reported, they consisted in blot full-thickness hemorrhages with rounded domed contours suggestive of venous occlusion and retinal ischemia, very similar to the lesions seen in the animal model. These hemorrhagic lesions, morphologically similar to neonatal retinal hemorrhages, had a higher incidence than in controls; they also took longer to resolve when compared with the reabsorption time of the neonatal hemorrhages due to birth trauma and the hemorrhagic lesions in newborns of mothers in whom consumption of other drugs--but not cocaine--were reported. CONCLUSIONS A topographic and morphologic parallelism can be established between the retinal vascular alterations found in humans consuming cocaine and in the animal model of prenatal exposure to this drug of abuse; although findings from animal studies may be difficult to apply directly to humans, these data strongly support that cocaine can be a causal factor for the occurrence of retinal vascular disruption in newborns.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007231 Infant, Newborn An infant during the first 28 days after birth. Neonate,Newborns,Infants, Newborn,Neonates,Newborn,Newborn Infant,Newborn Infants
D008297 Male Males
D011247 Pregnancy The status during which female mammals carry their developing young (EMBRYOS or FETUSES) in utero before birth, beginning from FERTILIZATION to BIRTH. Gestation,Pregnancies
D011297 Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects The consequences of exposing the FETUS in utero to certain factors, such as NUTRITION PHYSIOLOGICAL PHENOMENA; PHYSIOLOGICAL STRESS; DRUGS; RADIATION; and other physical or chemical factors. These consequences are observed later in the offspring after BIRTH. Delayed Effects, Prenatal Exposure,Late Effects, Prenatal Exposure
D003042 Cocaine An alkaloid ester extracted from the leaves of plants including coca. It is a local anesthetic and vasoconstrictor and is clinically used for that purpose, particularly in the eye, ear, nose, and throat. It also has powerful central nervous system effects similar to the amphetamines and is a drug of abuse. Cocaine, like amphetamines, acts by multiple mechanisms on brain catecholaminergic neurons; the mechanism of its reinforcing effects is thought to involve inhibition of dopamine uptake. Cocaine HCl,Cocaine Hydrochloride,HCl, Cocaine,Hydrochloride, Cocaine
D004195 Disease Models, Animal Naturally-occurring or experimentally-induced animal diseases with pathological processes analogous to human diseases. Animal Disease Model,Animal Disease Models,Disease Model, Animal
D005260 Female Females
D005654 Fundus Oculi The concave interior of the eye, consisting of the retina, the choroid, the sclera, the optic disk, and blood vessels, seen by means of the ophthalmoscope. (Cline et al., Dictionary of Visual Science, 4th ed) Fundus of the Eye,Ocular Fundus,Fundus, Ocular
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000328 Adult A person having attained full growth or maturity. Adults are of 19 through 44 years of age. For a person between 19 and 24 years of age, YOUNG ADULT is available. Adults

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