Pupillary Responses to Full-Field Chromatic Stimuli Are Reduced in Patients with Early-Stage Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma.
Raymond P Najjar, Sourabh Sharma, Eray Atalay, Annadata V Rukmini, Christopher Sun, Jing Zhan Lock, Mani Baskaran, Shamira A Perera, Rahat Husain, Ecosse Lamoureux, Joshua J Gooley, Tin Aung, Dan Milea
Summary
Patients with early-stage POAG exhibit reduced pupillary responses to moderate and high irradiances of blue and red lights.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To evaluate the ability of chromatic pupillometry to reveal abnormal pupillary responses to light in patients with early-stage primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and to test whether the degree of pupillometric impairment correlates with structural hallmarks of optic nerve damage in the disease.
DESIGN
Cross-sectional study.
PARTICIPANTS
Forty-six patients with early-stage POAG (63.4±8.3 years, 63% male, 87% ethnic-Chinese) and 90 age-matched healthy controls (61.4±8.6 years, 34% male, 89% ethnic-Chinese). Patients with POAG had a visual field mean deviation (VFMD) of -6 decibels or better on automated perimetry.
METHODS
Each participant underwent a monocular 2-minute exposure to blue light (462 nm) followed by another 2-minute exposure to red light (638 nm) using a modified Ganzfeld dome equipped with a light-emitting diode lighting system. The light stimuli intensity was increased logarithmically to evaluate the combined extrinsic and intrinsic response of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs). Light-induced changes in horizontal pupil diameter were assessed monocularly using infrared pupillography.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Baseline-adjusted, light-induced pupillary constriction amplitudes were calculated, and individual irradiance-response curves were constructed for each stimulus. Pupillary constriction amplitudes were compared between groups and across light intensities using a linear mixed model analysis. The linear relationship between pupillometric parameters and different structural and functional features of glaucoma was assessed using Pearson's correlation analysis.
RESULTS
Light-induced pupillary constriction was reduced in patients with early-stage POAG compared with controls at moderate to high irradiances (≥11 Log photons/cm/s) of blue (P = 0.003) and red (P < 0.001) light. Maximal pupillary constriction amplitude was correlated with retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFL) thickness (blue: r = 0.51, P < 0.001; red: r = 0.45, P = 0.002) in patients with POAG but not in controls. Conversely, pupillometric parameters were not correlated with visual field scores in patients with early-stage POAG.
CONCLUSIONS
Patients with early-stage POAG exhibit reduced pupillary responses to moderate and high irradiances of blue and red lights. This wavelength-independent functional alteration correlates with structural thinning of the RNFL and could be the consequence of dysfunction or loss of melanopsin expressing ipRGCs in the early stages of the disease.
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Discussion
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