Effect of combined water drinking test and dark room provocative testing in Caucasian eyes with narrow angles.
Römkens Hellen C S, Beckers Henny J M, Schouten Jan S A G, Berendschot Tos T J M, Webers Carroll A B
AI Summary
Combined provocative testing for narrow angles showed no clinical significance for predicting angle closure disease or related damage, making it unhelpful for early diagnosis.
Abstract
Purpose
To assess the usefulness of water drinking test and dark room provocative testing (WDT + DRPT) in current clinical practice by evaluating input parameters from Swept-source Optical Coherence Tomography (SS-OCT) images, and to determine if clinical factors like axial length, central endothelial cell count (CECC) and retinal nerve fibre layer thickness (RNFL) thickness are associated with a positive WDT + DRPT.
Methods
SS-OCT examination was performed in consecutive subjects presenting as new patients in the outpatient clinic aged > 40 years. If at least one eye met the inclusion criteria (anterior chamber angles <20° and anterior chamber depth < 2.5 mm on SS-OCT), subjects were included in this study and WDT + DRPT was carried out. The eye with the smallest angle was analysed. The difference in parameters between eyes with a positive (≥8 mmHg) and negative (<8 mmHg) increase in intraocular pressure (IOP) after WDT + DRPT were statistically analysed. Second, the correlation between IOP increase after WDT + DRPT and anterior chamber angle parameters (RNFL thickness, CECC and axial length) was studied.
Results
A total of 95 subjects with a mean age of 64 years were included. There was an association between IOP increase after WDT + DRPT and anterior chamber angle characteristics, however this was not of clinical significance. No positive results after WDT + DRPT were found in patients with anterior chamber angles ≥ 20°.
Conclusions
The present findings indicate that this combined provocative test has no definite correlative or predictive value in angle closure disease. Further, the test is not useful in predicting early diagnosis or possible CECC or RNFL loss.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts4
The combined water drinking test and dark room provocative testing (WDT+DRPT) has no definite correlative or predictive value in angle closure disease in Caucasian eyes with narrow angles.
The combined water drinking test and dark room provocative testing (WDT+DRPT) is not useful in predicting early diagnosis or possible central endothelial cell count (CECC) or retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) loss in Caucasian eyes with narrow angles.
There was an association between intraocular pressure (IOP) increase after combined water drinking test and dark room provocative testing (WDT+DRPT) and anterior chamber angle characteristics, but this was not of clinical significance in Caucasian eyes with narrow angles.
No positive results (IOP increase ≥8 mmHg) after combined water drinking test and dark room provocative testing (WDT+DRPT) were found in patients with anterior chamber angles ≥ 20° in a study of 95 subjects with a mean age of 64 years.
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