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Am J OphthalmolApril 202020 citations

Macular Damage in Glaucoma is Associated With Deficits in Facial Recognition.

Hirji Sitara H, Liebmann Jeffrey M, Hood Donald C, Cioffi George A, Blumberg Dana M


AI Summary

Glaucoma patients with macular damage show impaired facial recognition, even with good central acuity, partly due to reduced contrast sensitivity. This highlights a critical functional impact beyond vision loss.

Abstract

Purpose

This report examines the relationship between glaucomatous macular damage and facial recognition. In addition, it assesses the role of contrast sensitivity (CS) as an intermediary step in the causal pathway between macular damage and impairment of facial recognition.

Design

Prospective cross-sectional study.

Methods

This study was conducted in a single tertiary care center. The study population included 144 eyes of 72 participants with a diagnosis of open angle glaucoma in one or both eyes and a visual acuity of 20/40 or better in each eye. The presence or absence of macular damage was determined by comparing corresponding regions of the retinal nerve fiber layer and the retinal ganglion cell layer with spectral-domain optical coherence tomography with the 10-2 visual field (VF). Better and worse eye was determined by 10-2 VF mean deviations (MDs). Interventions were 1) macular function as measured by 10-2 VF and 2) CS as measured by the Freiburg Visual Acuity and Contrast Test (FrACT). The primary outcome measure was the Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT) score.

Results

Regardless of eye, there was a significant correlation between facial recognition and 10-2 VF MD (P < .0001 better, worse eye). The 10-2 VF MD remained a significant predictor of facial recognition after adjusting for potential confounders including glaucoma severity, CS, age, and visual acuity (P = .004 better eye, P = .019 worse eye).

Conclusions

Even with good central visual acuity, patients with glaucomatous macular damage exhibit diminished facial recognition, which is partly mediated through diminished CS.


MeSH Terms

AgedCross-Sectional StudiesDisease ProgressionFacial RecognitionFemaleGlaucomaHumansIntraocular PressureMacula LuteaMaleNerve FibersOptic DiskProspective StudiesRetinal DiseasesRetinal Ganglion CellsTomography, Optical CoherenceVisual AcuityVisual Fields

Key Concepts5

A prospective cross-sectional study of 144 eyes of 72 participants with open angle glaucoma and visual acuity of 20/40 or better in each eye found a significant correlation between facial recognition and 10-2 visual field mean deviation (P < .0001 for both better and worse eyes).

PrognosisCross-sectionalProspective Cross-sectional Studyn=144 eyes of 72 participantsCh6Ch7Ch12

In a prospective cross-sectional study of 144 eyes of 72 participants with open angle glaucoma, the 10-2 visual field mean deviation remained a significant predictor of facial recognition after adjusting for potential confounders including glaucoma severity, contrast sensitivity, age, and visual acuity (P = .004 for better eye, P = .019 for worse eye).

PrognosisCross-sectionalProspective Cross-sectional Studyn=144 eyes of 72 participantsCh6Ch7Ch12

A prospective cross-sectional study of 144 eyes of 72 participants with open angle glaucoma concluded that patients with glaucomatous macular damage exhibit diminished facial recognition, even with good central visual acuity, which is partly mediated through diminished contrast sensitivity.

PrognosisCross-sectionalProspective Cross-sectional Studyn=144 eyes of 72 participantsCh7Ch12

The presence or absence of macular damage in a prospective cross-sectional study of 144 eyes of 72 participants with open angle glaucoma was determined by comparing corresponding regions of the retinal nerve fiber layer and the retinal ganglion cell layer with spectral-domain optical coherence tomography with the 10-2 visual field.

MethodologyCross-sectionalProspective Cross-sectional Studyn=144 eyes of 72 participantsCh5Ch6

In a prospective cross-sectional study of 144 eyes of 72 participants with open angle glaucoma, macular function was measured by 10-2 visual field and contrast sensitivity was measured by the Freiburg Visual Acuity and Contrast Test (FrACT), with the primary outcome measure being the Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT) score.

MethodologyCross-sectionalProspective Cross-sectional Studyn=144 eyes of 72 participantsCh6Ch7

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