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  • Title: Quantitative morphology of the central fovea in the primate retina.
    Author: Krebs W, Krebs IP.
    Journal: Am J Anat; 1989 Mar; 184(3):225-36. PubMed ID: 2750678.
    Abstract:
    Electron micrograph composites of tangenital sections of the fovea centralis of three cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca irus) and one baboon (Papio anubis) were used to determine the spatial density of the principal retinal cells. In the center of the foveola, the density of cones ranged from 113,000 to 230,000/mm2, and pigment epithelial cells from 4,900 to 7,000/mm2. At a distance of 500 microns from the foveolar center the density of the cone cell pedicles ranged from 29,000 to 36,300/mm2, and the density of horizontal cells ranged from 19,000 to 25,100/mm2. Densities of bipolar, Müller, and amacrine cells were determined in only two monkeys and in the baboon. The fact that the cone cell pedicles have a larger diameter than the foveolar cones explains the geometry of the fovea. The morphology of the junction between foveolar cone outer segments and the pigment epithelium reflects the complex metabolism of this functional unit. The comparison with the peripheral primate retina suggests that the densities of horizontal and bipolar cells, but not of amacrine and Müller cells, are correlated with the density of cone cell pedicles.
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