Location of Disc Hemorrhage and Direction of Progression in Glaucomatous Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Defects.
Summary
The lateral location of DH on the RNFLD border was highly congruent with the direction of RNFLD widening.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To investigate the relationship between glaucomatous disc hemorrhage (DH) location with respect to the nasal or temporal margin of the retinal nerve fiber layer defect (RNFLD) and the direction of RNFLD widening.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
This is a retrospective, cross-sectional study. Patients with any documented episode of glaucomatous DH throughout the follow-up period, and definite RNFLD widening on retinal nerve fiber layer photographs were analyzed. The location of DH was recorded as either nasal or temporal, and the direction of RNFLD widening was investigated. The laterality of DH location on the RNFLD border and the direction of RNFLD widening were correlated with each other. We also compared clinical parameters between eyes with nasal versus temporal margin DHs.
RESULTS
We analyzed 123 eyes from 116 patients with definite widening of the RNFLD and glaucomatous DH at the border between the healthy and damaged retinal nerve fiber layer. The most common diagnosis was normal-tension glaucoma (109, 87.9%). The most frequent location of DH was the temporal margin of an inferotemporal RNFLD (75, 61.0%), and the most frequent pattern of change in RNFLD was temporal widening (89, 72.4%). The absolute congruency was 82.9% and the total congruency was 99.2%. No significant differences were identified between eyes with nasal versus temporal margin DHs.
CONCLUSIONS
The lateral location of DH on the RNFLD border was highly congruent with the direction of RNFLD widening. This correspondence of laterality between DH development and progression of RNFLD may suggest an intimate structural relationship during the pathogenesis of DH, at the enlarging RNFLD border.
More by Eun Jung Lee
View full profile →A novel hypothesis for the pathogenesis of glaucomatous disc hemorrhage.
A neuroglia-based interpretation of glaucomatous neuroretinal rim thinning in the optic nerve head.
Microvascular Compromise Develops Following Nerve Fiber Layer Damage in Normal-Tension Glaucoma Without Choroidal Vasculature Involvement.
Top Research in Optic Nerve & Disc
Browse all →Efficacy of a Deep Learning System for Detecting Glaucomatous Optic Neuropathy Based on Color Fundus Photographs.
Relationship between Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography Vessel Density and Severity of Visual Field Loss in Glaucoma.
Inflammation in Glaucoma: From the back to the front of the eye, and beyond.
Discussion
Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.