The Association Between Age and Systemic Variables and the Longitudinal Trend of Intraocular Pressure in a Large-Scale Health Examination Cohort.
Asaoka Ryo, Obana Akira, Murata Hiroshi, Fujino Yuri, Omoto Takashi, Aoki Shuichiro, Muto Shigetaka, Takayanagi Yuji, Inoue Tatsuya, Tanito Masaki
AI Summary
This study found IOP generally decreases with age, but various systemic factors like gender, blood cell counts, and liver enzymes significantly influence the long-term trend of IOP.
Abstract
Purpose
The detailed effects of age and systemic factors on intraocular pressure (IOP) have not been fully understood because of the lack of a large-scale longitudinal investigation. This study aimed to investigate the effect of various systemic factors on the longitudinal change of IOP.
Methods
There were a total of 20,909 eyes of 10,471 subjects from a health checkup cohort that were followed up for systemic factors: (i) age at baseline, (ii) sex, (iii) time series body mass index (BMI), (iv) time series smoking habits, (v) time series systolic and diastolic blood pressures (SBP and DBP), and (vi) time series 19 blood examinations (all of the time series data was acquired at each annual visit), along with IOP annually for at least 8 years. Then the longitudinal effect of the systemic factors on the change of IOP was investigated.
Results
IOP significantly decreased by -0.084 mm Hg/year. BMI, SBP, DBP, smoking habits, total triglyceride, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and glycosylated hemoglobin A1c were not significantly associated with the change of IOP. Higher values of age, aspartate aminotransferase, hemoglobin, platelet, and calcium were suggested to be significantly associated with the decrease of IOP, whereas higher alanine aminotransferase, guanosine triphosphate, white blood cell count, red blood cell count, and female gender were significantly associated with the increase of IOP.
Conclusions
Age, aspartate aminotransferase, hemoglobin, platelet, calcium, alanine aminotransferase, guanosine triphosphate, white blood cell count, red blood cell count, and gender were the systemic variables significantly associated with the change of IOP.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts4
Intraocular pressure (IOP) significantly decreased by -0.084 mm Hg/year in a health checkup cohort of 20,909 eyes of 10,471 subjects followed annually for at least 8 years.
Higher values of age, aspartate aminotransferase, hemoglobin, platelet, and calcium were significantly associated with the decrease of intraocular pressure (IOP) in a health checkup cohort of 20,909 eyes of 10,471 subjects followed annually for at least 8 years.
Higher alanine aminotransferase, guanosine triphosphate, white blood cell count, red blood cell count, and female gender were significantly associated with the increase of intraocular pressure (IOP) in a health checkup cohort of 20,909 eyes of 10,471 subjects followed annually for at least 8 years.
Body mass index (BMI), systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), smoking habits, total triglyceride, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and glycosylated hemoglobin A1c were not significantly associated with the change of intraocular pressure (IOP) in a health checkup cohort of 20,909 eyes of 10,471 subjects followed annually for at least 8 years.
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