Global Search

Search articles, concepts, and chapters

Br J OphthalmolSeptember 20250 citations

Assessment of the effect of physical activity on intraocular pressure using a novel implanted telemetric pressure sensor.

Pennisi Vincenzo, van den Bosch Jacqueline J O N, Neustaeter Anna, Ehmer Angela, Thieme Hagen, Hoffmann Michael B, Choritz Lars


AI Summary

This study found that physical exercise temporarily increases intraocular pressure in glaucoma patients, returning to or below baseline post-exercise, suggesting a linked physiological response.

Abstract

Background

Due to technical limitations of commonly used tonometry devices, the effects of physical exercise on intraocular pressure (IOP) have never been studied during exercise. This study continuously monitored IOP variations in patients with glaucoma during physical exercise using an implanted IOP microsensor.

Methods

In total, 10 participants (six male and four female) with open-angle glaucoma (age range: 67-79), previously implanted with an IOP sensor, were included. We monitored IOP telemetrically during a 10 min session on a bicycle ergometer with a stepwise power increase from 0 to 75 W, in 25 W increments, at 2 min intervals. We also recorded IOP during the 2 min resting period after the exercise compared with resting baseline before exercise.

Results

The average IOP increased from 15.4±1.3 mm Hg at rest to 18.0±1.3 mm Hg at 75 W and returned to 14.4±1.0 mm Hg during the resting period after exercise. During the resting period after the activity, average IOP reduced below baseline in 8 out of 10 patients (ΔIOP=-0.98±0.57 mm Hg, p=0.12). Both systolic blood pressure and heart rate were highly correlated with IOP during the exercise (R ² =0.997, p=0.002 and R ² =0.986, p=0.007, respectively).

Conclusions

In our study, IOP, heart rate and blood pressure increased and decreased with physical intensity, suggesting these parameters are closely linked and potentially driven by a common mechanism during aerobic exercise. Further studies with larger patient groups are warranted to better understand the mechanisms involved.


MeSH Terms

HumansIntraocular PressureMaleFemaleAgedTonometry, OcularExerciseTelemetryGlaucoma, Open-AngleBlood PressureHeart Rate

Key Concepts4

The average intraocular pressure (IOP) in 10 participants with open-angle glaucoma, monitored telemetrically using an implanted IOP microsensor, increased from 15.4±1.3 mm Hg at rest to 18.0±1.3 mm Hg at 75 W during a 10-minute bicycle ergometer session with stepwise power increase.

MechanismCase seriesProspective Case Seriesn=10 participants with open-angle glaucomaCh3Ch12

The average intraocular pressure (IOP) in 10 participants with open-angle glaucoma, monitored telemetrically using an implanted IOP microsensor, returned to 14.4±1.0 mm Hg during the 2-minute resting period after a 10-minute bicycle ergometer session.

MechanismCase seriesProspective Case Seriesn=10 participants with open-angle glaucomaCh3Ch12

During the resting period after physical activity, average intraocular pressure (IOP) reduced below baseline in 8 out of 10 participants with open-angle glaucoma, with a mean ΔIOP of -0.98±0.57 mm Hg (p=0.12), monitored telemetrically using an implanted IOP microsensor.

MechanismCase seriesProspective Case Seriesn=10 participants with open-angle glaucomaCh3Ch12

Both systolic blood pressure (R²=0.997, p=0.002) and heart rate (R²=0.986, p=0.007) were highly correlated with intraocular pressure (IOP) during exercise in 10 participants with open-angle glaucoma, monitored telemetrically using an implanted IOP microsensor.

MechanismCase seriesProspective Case Seriesn=10 participants with open-angle glaucomaCh3Ch12

Is this article assigned to the wrong chapter(s)? Let us know.