© 2001 by the American Diabetes Association, Inc. Increased Prevalence of Microthromboses in Retinal Capillaries of Diabetic IndividualsSchepens Eye Research Institute and Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
In diabetic retinopathy, capillary nonperfusion and eventual obliteration can lead to retinal ischemia and sight-threatening neovascularization. The occurrence of retinal microthrombosis in human diabetes has long been suspected and occasionally observed but never systematically demonstrated. We used trypsin digestion to isolate the intact vascular network from retinas obtained postmortem from nine diabetic donors (age 64 ± 11 years, duration of diabetes 6 ± 4 years; mean ± SD) and eight age-matched nondiabetic donors. Topographically matched sectors (each one-sixth of retina) of diabetic and nondiabetic retinas were tested sequentially with antibodies to fibrin cross-linking factor XIII and platelet glycoprotein (GP)-IIIa to identify fibrin-platelet thrombi. In some trypsin digests, we also examined vascular cell apoptosis. The retina from a nondiabetic donor, 24 years of age, who had died of trauma, was used to exclude confounding influences caused by the postmortem period. When compared with those of nondiabetic donors, the retinas of diabetic donors showed double the number of capillary segments with colocalized immunostaining for factor XIII and GPIIIa (P = 0.02). The total area of the positive segments was fourfold greater in the diabetic than in the nondiabetic donors (P = 0.02) and correlated with the duration of diabetes (r = 0.71, P < 0.05). Large thrombi were six times more frequent in the diabetic donors (P = 0.03), and there was a significant topographical association of microthrombosis with apoptotic cells in both diabetic and nondiabetic vessels (P = 0.0001). Hence, diabetes of short duration was found to be associated with a greater than normal number and size of platelet-fibrin thrombi in the retinal capillaries. These thrombi can contribute to capillary obliteration and retinal ischemia and may be a practical target for early drug intervention.
The retinal microangiopathy caused by diabetes leads to ischemic retinopathy with sight-threatening neovascularization when a critical number of capillaries becomes nonperfused and obliterated (1). The process begins in individual capillaries, then involves groups of capillaries, and advances centripetally to the arterioles and their branches (1). It is recognizable clinically as areas of retinal nonperfusion in fluorescein angiograms and results histologically in acellular capillaries tubes of basement membranes devoid of endothelial lining and mural pericytes (1,2). Longitudinal studies in diabetic patients have shown that capillary closure is mostly irreversible but that a percentage of capillaries can be recanalized (3). This suggests the occurrence of reversible occlusive phenomena. Capillary occlusion by platelet and fibrin thrombi has been noted in the retina of rats with experimental or spontaneous diabetes of at least 8 months duration (4,5), and stasis of leukocytes in retinal capillaries has been observed as early as a few weeks after induction of experimental diabetes (6,7). Occurrence of capillary thrombosis in human diabetic retinopathy has long been surmised (8,9) but never documented. In this study, we have examined the prevalence of microthrombosis in the retinas isolated postmortem from diabetic and nondiabetic eye donors.
Eye donors and specimens. The human eyes from anonymous donors were provided by certified eye banks through the National Disease Research Interchange. The donors were selected based on age <80 years, diabetes duration 15 years, and fewest possible chronic pathologies other than diabetes. Criteria for exclusion were retinal or hematological diseases, uremia, and use of chemotherapy or life support measures. The characteristics of the donors and specimens are reported in Table 1. The eyes of a 24-year-old male donor who had no medical history and had died of trauma in a motor vehicle accident were used as negative controls to identify vascular events attributable to the postmortem period. All eyes were fixed in 10% buffered formalin by the eye banks as soon as possible after death.
To isolate the vascular network from the neural retina, each retina was cut in six sectors, and each sector was separately digested with crude trypsin according to the method of Cogan et al. (10), with modifications previously reported (11). The trypsin digests were mounted on Silane-coated slides, air-dried, and stored at -20°C.
Immunohistochemistry. The trypsin digests were tested sequentially with antibodies to the A-chains of factor XIII and to platelet glycoprotein (GP)-IIIa. Factor XIII is a transglutaminase that catalyzes the covalent cross-linking of fibrin monomers to form a stable complex during clotting. Both plasma and platelet factor XIII contain A-chains, and immunodetection of factor XIII A-subunit has been found most sensitive in revealing capillary thrombi (13). However, the A-subunit has sequence homology with tissue transglutaminases. Hence, to ensure specific identification of luminal thrombi, the trypsin digests were also immunostained for GPIIIa, the ß-subunit of the GPIIbIIIa integrin receptor that on activated platelets binds fibrinogen and von Willebrand factor and mediates irreversible platelet aggregation. A formalin-resistant epitope of GPIIIa is detected by monoclonal antibody Y2/51, which has been used in the identification of microthrombi (14). The retinal trypsin digests were rehydrated in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 20 min, blocked with 2% bovine serum albumin (BSA) in PBS for 10 min at room temperature, and incubated overnight at 4°C with factor XIIIA antiserum (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA) diluted 1:1,000 in incubation buffer (PBS containing 2% BSA and 0.5% Triton X-100). The specimens were washed, blocked again for 10 min, and exposed to fluorescein isothiocyanateconjugated secondary antibodies for 1 h at room temperature. After PBS washings, the specimens were mounted in Slow-Fade (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) and analyzed under a Nikon Eclipse E800 fluorescence microscope equipped with a monitor and a Spot Digital Camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI). After capturing and storing the images of interest, the trypsin digests were washed in PBS for 20 min at room temperature, blocked, and incubated overnight at 4°C with monoclonal antibody Y2/51 to GPIIIa (Biomeda Corporation, Foster City, CA). The antibody used was diluted 1:10 in incubation buffer. GPIIIa was detected by peroxidase immunohistochemistry using the Vectastain Elite ABC Kit (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) as previously described (15). Enzyme-catalized reaction was used rather than immunofluorescence because it proved to be vastly more sensitive for the detection of GPIIIa. The specimens were then counterstained with periodic acidSchiff hematoxylin to reveal vascular morphology and cellularity. Each experiment included specimens from two diabetic and two age-matched nondiabetic donors, as well as negative controls in which the primary antiserum to factor XIIIA was substituted with nonimmune rabbit serum and the antibody to GPIIIa with isotypic mouse IgG1.
In situ cell death.
Analysis.
Data are summarized as the mean ± SD. Statistical analysis was performed with the unpaired t and the Mann-Whitney rank-sum tests with similar results. The
The diabetic and nondiabetic donors were of similar age (64 ± 11 and 63 ± 9 years, respectively), and for almost all donors, the causes of death as well as the pathologies other than diabetes were cardiovascular (Table 1). The known duration of diabetes was 6 ± 4 years, which in epidemiological studies of patients with late-onset diabetes is associated with a 4050% prevalence of retinopathy, almost exclusively nonproliferative (16). In the diabetic and nondiabetic groups, the time elapsed from death to enucleation of the eyes was 3 ± 1 and 4 ± 1 h respectively, and the time to fixation was 13 ± 6 and 11 ± 4 h. There was no evidence of neovascularization in the retinas examined. The images in Fig. 1 are representative of those observed in the retinal capillaries of both nondiabetic and diabetic donors. Factor XIIIA immunostaining showed a faint diffuse or an occasionally patchy background fluorescence, most likely attributable to vascular wall transglutaminases. Staining of the capillary walls was often more marked along the edges, yielding a rail-like appearance (Fig. 1A). Such areas were negative for GPIIIa. In contrast, in other capillary segments, intense and homogeneous factor XIIIA fluorescence identified discrete and compact intraluminal deposits corresponding to clumps of platelets staining for GPIIIa. Such areas, in which immunostaining for the two antigens colocalized, were counted as thrombi. Factor XIIIA staining was often more homogeneous than GPIIIa staining of the same area (Figs. 1A and C), suggesting detection not only of platelets, but also of plasma factor XIII trapped in the fibrin that enmeshed the platelet aggregates (17). The more homogeneous factor XIIIA immunostaining was reflected in the image analysis in values numerically larger than those computed for GPIIIa immunostaining of the same area.
In the 24-year-old donor who had died of trauma, the one-sixth of retina examined showed only four positive capillaries, and the immunostained areas were extremely small. The total area of factor XIIIA positivity was 810 µm2, and that of GPIIIa positivity was 416 µm2. The number and extension of retinal capillary segments showing dual staining for factor XIIIA and for GPIIIa were greater in the two study groups, which consisted of older donors; and all measurements yielded significantly larger values in the diabetic retinas (Fig. 2). In the diabetic group (n = 9), the number of positive capillary segments was 60 ± 29 per one-sixth of retina (vs. 32 ± 18 in the nondiabetic group, n = 8, P = 0.02); the total area of factor XIIIApositive segments was 29,793 ± 14,089 µm2 (vs. 7,544 ± 8,558; P = 0.01), and the total area of GPIIIa-positive segments was 17,061 ± 13,884 µm2 (vs. 4,231 ± 3,600; P = 0.02). In individual donors, the total area of factor XIIIApositive capillary segments correlated with the duration of diabetes (r = 0.71, P < 0.05). The correlation between the total number of positive capillaries and duration of diabetes (r = 0.47) was not significant in the small group studied. None of the measurements correlated with age in the diabetic and nondiabetic donors; if the 24-year-old donor was included in the nondiabetic group, r was 0.49. The findings were consistent within the same retina. In two different retinal sectors of a nondiabetic donor, each representing one-sixth of retina, the number of positive capillary segments was 21 and 24, respectively (Table 1).
Two of the nondiabetic donors were known to have received heparin at the time of the myocardial infarction that was the cause of death (Table 1). In one of these donors, there were only 7 retinal capillary segments positive for factor XIIIA and for GPIIbIIIa, whereas there were 26 in the other, a value close to the group mean. In one nondiabetic and two diabetic donors who were known to have been on Coumadin treatment, the number of positive capillary segments was 22, 53, and 101, respectively, values within the range of the respective group. Aspirin treatment was reported for only one subject (diabetic donor no. 5 in Table 1), who also had a number of positive capillary segments within the group range. In the absence of laboratory data on the efficacy of anticoagulation and without knowledge of the duration, dose, and compliance with aspirin treatment, it is not possible to draw conclusions on the effects of the drugs on retinal microthrombosis. Studies of experimental retinal microthrombosis have shown that the duration of occlusion increases with the length of the vascular segment involved (18). We thus compared in nondiabetic and diabetic trypsin digests the prevalence of capillaries showing areas of factor XIIIA immunoreactivity in excess of 1,000 µm2, equivalent to four times the average size of the thrombus measured in nondiabetic vessels. Such large thrombi were rare within the group of nondiabetic donors (1.2 ± 1.6 per one-sixth of retina, with a total extension of 3,056 ± 2,704 µm2); and in the diabetic donors, both their number (7.6 ± 5.3 per one-sixth of retina) and total extension (13,640 ± 9,757 µm2) (2) were severalfold greater (P < 0.03 for both measurements). The microvascular network of a diabetic donor was reconstructed from individual microscopic fields (Fig. 3) to provide a perspective for the areas occupied by these larger thrombi in relationship to the total capillary area and to show their features and topography. Of the 11 capillary segments in which factor XIIIA immunoreactivity was in excess of 1,000 µm2, 5 were located in the posterior polar region, a preferential site of ischemic events in diabetic retinopathy (19).
A cellular abnormality we have previously noted in the retinal capillaries of diabetic subjects, which may relate to microthrombosis in numerous ways, is accelerated apoptosis of vascular cells (11). The topographical relationship of apoptotic (TUNEL-positive) cells and thrombi was examined in two diabetic and two nondiabetic donors. Capillary thrombi were much more numerous than TUNEL-positive cells, but the latter were often detected adjacent to or within microthrombi (Fig. 4). The observed associations of TUNEL-positive nuclei and microthrombi were 12 versus the 0.03 that was expected in diabetic vessels, and 1 vs. 0.01 expected in nondiabetic vessels (P = 0.0001), indicating that microvascular cell apoptosis and microthrombosis occur in contiguity not by chance alone.
In retinas obtained postmortem from type 2 diabetic individuals, we observed more numerous and larger microthrombi than in retinas of age-matched nondiabetic individuals. We found a correlation between the total area of capillary thrombi and the known duration of diabetes, which must, however, be interpreted with caution, in view of the limited sample examined and the known difficulty in precisely dating the onset of type 2 diabetes. We also observed a greater than expected frequency of association of microthrombi with apoptotic vascular cells. A caveat to be addressed outright is that the study was performed on postmortem samples. Human retinas for systematic laboratory studies are accessible only through the eye donor programs but could be expected to be informative specimens, because there are differences between intravital thrombi and thrombi formed postmortem. In accordance with the evidence that platelets do not become activated postmortem (20), white thrombi consisting of compact aggregation of platelets and firm fibrin can only be formed during intravital clotting. Thrombi formed postmortem predominantly contain erythrocytes, a variable number of leukocytes, a few platelets, and a loose fibrin network (21). The reagents used in our study were directed at platelets and fibrin and would not have detected thrombi with other components. Moreover, the reagents detected only platelet aggregates, not platelets suspended in blood, and colocalized the platelet aggregates with cross-linked fibrin. Direct experimental confirmation that the processing of the tissue and the postmortem period could not in themselves generate the appearance of microthrombosis was sought by studying the eyes of a young donor who died of trauma and had no medical history. In the retina of this individual, only a minuscule number and extension of thrombi were recorded. The larger number of microthrombi found in the retinal vessels of the study groups must reflect the older age of the donors, their cardiovascular diseases, or agonal events. The ages of the diabetic and nondiabetic subjects studied was similar, and the contribution of vascular disease and agonal events was controlled, to the best of our abilities, by matching the diabetic and control groups for pathologies other than diabetes and for causes of death. Thus, the greater number and extension of retinal microthrombi encountered in the diabetic donors is likely to reflect the contribution of diabetes. Many of the systemic abnormalities that make both type 1 and type 2 diabetic patients more prone to large vessel disease are prothrombotic: hyperreactive platelets (22), decreased vascular prostacyclin production (22), endothelial dysfunction resulting in increased circulating levels of von Willebrand factor (22) and leukocyte adhesion molecules (23,24), hypercoagulability (25), and decreased fibrinolysis (25). These may also contribute to microvascular disease. Increased levels of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (26) and of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 mRNA (27), as well as decreased levels of tissue plasminogen activator (28), are specifically found in retinal vessels of diabetic compared with nondiabetic individuals. Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 can facilitate the leukostasis described in diabetic retinal vessels (6,7) and potentially leads to occlusions and endothelial injury or death. The combined reciprocal changes of plasminogen activator and its inhibitor can compromise fibrinolysis, thus permitting extension of thrombi and lessening recanalization. Additionally, the accelerated apoptosis occurring in diabetic retinal capillaries (11) can provide a trigger for microthrombosis insofar as apoptotic endothelial cells become procoagulant (29) and generate a proinflammatory environment (30). Indeed, in this study, we observed a significant association of vascular cell apoptosis and thrombosis within the same capillary segment. The relationship of endothelial activation and apoptosis with microthrombosis is likely to be a circular one. On the one hand, endothelial activation and apoptosis are prothrombotic, and on the other hand, ischemia consequent of microthrombosis can lead to vascular cell death and/or enhance endothelial leukocyteadhesive interactions (31). An added contribution of systemic hypertension to the increased prevalence of microthromboses observed in the diabetic donors cannot be excluded but was not apparent in our small cohort. Hypertension was explicitly reported in two of the diabetic and one of the nondiabetic donors, and the number and extension of retinal microthrombi in these subjects were in the mid-range or lower range of the distribution for the respective group. The nondiabetic individuals examined in this study also showed retinal microthromboses. The occurrence of these microthromboses may explain the extensive capillary obliteration found in the peripheral (32) and central (33) retina of older individuals but will not result in the retinopathy typical of diabetes. Thus, one wonders whether and how the microthromboses observed in the diabetic donors in our study relate to the development of retinal microangiopathy. The results of trials with antiplatelet agents suggest that they may be related, and this and other studies propose possible mechanisms. In humans, aspirin administration had no beneficial effect in advanced nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (34) but significantly slowed the progression of early retinopathy (35), akin to ticlopidine (36), and in dogs completely prevented the development of acellular capillaries when begun at the time of induction of diabetes (37). In their aggregate, these findings suggest that platelet-mediated events are important relatively early in the process of capillary obliteration in diabetes. Microthromboses may be especially damaging to diabetic vessels for at least three reasons. As shown in this study, they appear to be more frequent and extensive and/or less susceptible to recanalization, heightening the risk of ischemia. In turn, ischemia reperfusion appears to cause an exaggerated inflammatory response in diabetic microvessels (31). Lastly, vascular endothelium already challenged by hyperglycemia (38) is likely to be less tolerant of added stress and to enter an accelerated cycle of death (11) and replication (39). More extensive microthrombosis accompanied by an exaggerated inflammatory response and accelerated death and turnover of the endothelium can be mechanisms for irreversible architectural changes in the microvessels. It is becoming apparent that at least three processes can contribute to retinal capillary occlusion and obliteration in diabetes: proinflammatory changes, microthrombosis, and apoptosis. These processes have been documented in both human (11,26, and this study) and experimental (4567,11) diabetes. Their sequence has not been specifically investigated, but the studies in experimental animals indicate that the proinflammatory changes and leukostasis are the earliest detectable events (observed after 1 week of diabetes) (7) and that increased frequency of microthrombosis and apoptosis becomes detectable midway between the onset of diabetes and the appearance of characteristic histological changes of the capillaries (810 months) (4,5,11). However, the reduced retinal blood flow observed in type 1 diabetic patients still free of retinopathy (40) and the beneficial effect of short-term aspirin in improving retinal blood flow in these patients (41), together with the diminishing effect of aspirin as retinopathy progresses (34), suggests that microthrombosis may be occurring earlier than it is detected. It is conceivable that the earliest capillary occlusions caused by platelet-fibrin thrombi are transient and escape detection but leave behind a substantial degree of capillary damage. The results of this study and of the aspirin trials point to a mechanism for the causation of retinal ischemia in diabetes that could be approached with clinically available drugs. The American Diabetes Association (42) has recently issued recommendations for the use of aspirin in diabetic patients, targeted to both secondary and primary prevention of large vessel disease. When implemented early, such strategy may extend its benefits to retinopathy. Ultimately, sustained effects of antiplatelet therapy in preventing diabetic retinopathy will depend on whether the therapy targets a primary mechanism of capillary damage and whether the abnormalities that it may not prevent remain free of clinical consequences. The possibility that doses of aspirin achieving anti-inflammatory effects in addition to antiplatelet effects may be a superior strategy also needs investigation.
This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (EY 09122), the American Diabetes Association, the Ministero dellUniversitã e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica of Italy, and the George and Frances Levin Endowment. We are indebted to Ezio Fulcheri and Donald W. Pottle for consultation on image acquisition and analysis and to Chiara Gerhardinger, Gilbert Feke, Kameran Lashkari, and Wallace McMeel for critically reading the manuscript.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Mara Lorenzi, Schepens Eye Research Institute, 20 Staniford St., Boston, MA 02114. E-mail: lorenzi{at}vision.eri.harvard.edu. D.B. and M.M. contributed equally to this work. Received for publication 23 October 2000 and accepted in revised form 28 February 2001. BSA, bovine serum albumin; GP, glycoprotein; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferasemediated dUTP nick end-labeling.
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