Tracing the Progression of Retinitis Pigmentosa via Photoreceptor Interactions
Erika T. Camacho, Stephen Wirkus

TL;DR
This paper models the progression of retinitis pigmentosa using bifurcation theory, revealing how multiple factors contribute to disease stages and suggesting potential targets for stage-specific therapies.
Contribution
It introduces a mathematical framework that traces RP progression through bifurcation analysis, highlighting the importance of nutrient balance and photoreceptor renewal in disease development.
Findings
Progression of RP involves failure of multiple components.
Balance of nutrients and photoreceptor renewal is crucial at each stage.
Model provides insights into potential long-term interventions.
Abstract
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a group of inherited degenerative eye diseases characterized by mutations in the genetic structure of the photoreceptors that leads to the premature death of both rod and cone photoreceptors. Defects in particular genes encoding proteins that are involved in either the photoreceptor structure, phototransduction cascades, or visual cycle are expressed in the rods but ultimately affect both types of cells. RP is "typically" manifested by a steady death of rods followed by a period of stability in which cones survive initially and then inevitably die too. In some RP cases, rods and cones die off simultaneously or even cone death precedes rod death (reverse RP). The mechanisms and factors involved in the development of the different types of RP are not well understood nor have researchers been able to provide more than a limited number of short-term therapies.…
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