Spontaneous Retinal Venous Pulsation in Unilateral Primary Open-angle Glaucoma With Low Intraocular Pressure.
EunJi Lee, Tae-Woo Kim, Jung-Ah Kim, Ji Ah Kim, Hyunjoong Kim
Summary
SVP was less frequently found in glaucomatous eyes than healthy fellow eyes in unilateral POAG patients with low IOP.
Abstract
PURPOSE
The aim of this study was to investigate the presence of spontaneous retinal venous pulsation (SVP) in patients with unilateral primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and low intraocular pressure (IOP).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The SVP of 93 POAG patients with unilateral glaucoma and untreated IOP of ≤21 mm Hg was assessed using the movie tool of a confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscope (Spectralis HRA; Heidelberg Engineering). The frequency of SVP was compared between the glaucomatous and fellow eyes. Intereye differences in the frequency of SVP were assessed using McNemar test. A linear mixed-effect model was used to determine the factors associated with glaucomatous eyes, taking into account clustering of eyes within subjects.
RESULTS
Forty-five patients had SVP in both eyes and 15 had SVP in neither eye. Of the remaining 33 patients who showed SVP only in 1 eye, 31 had SVP only in the fellow eye, and 2 had SVP only in the glaucomatous eye. The SVP was significantly less prevalent in glaucomatous eyes (50.5%) than in fellow control eyes (81.7%) (P<0.001). In the linear mixed-effect model, the presence of SVP (P<0.001) and higher untreated IOP (P=0.001) were the significant predictors for glaucoma.
CONCLUSIONS
SVP was less frequently found in glaucomatous eyes than healthy fellow eyes in unilateral POAG patients with low IOP.
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Discussion
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