US researchers found that a grape-enriched diet resulted in a protective effect on retinal structure and function.
The retina is the part of the eye that contains the cells that respond to light, known as photoreceptors. There are two types of photoreceptors: rods and cones.
Retinal degenerative diseases can cause blindness due to photoreceptor cell death.
The study was conducted by a research team at the University of Miami, Bascom Palmer Eye Institute and investigated whether a diet supplemented with grapes could protect the photoreceptors in mice with retinal degeneration.
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The results showed that retinal function was significantly protected in the mice consuming the grape-enriched diet.
The grape-consuming group had three-fold higher rod and cone photoreceptor responses compared with those on the control diets. They also exhibited thicker retinas.
Grape consumption also protected retinal function in an oxidative stress model of macular degeneration.
Further analysis revealed that the grape diet resulted in lower levels of inflammatory proteins and higher amounts of protective proteins in the retinas.
"The grape-enriched diet provided substantial protection of retinal function which is very exciting," said Dr Abigail Hackam, lead investigator of the study.
The study was presented at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology conference in Orlando, Florida.