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Br J OphthalmolOctober 200934 citations

Correlation between optical coherence tomography and glaucomatous optic nerve head damage in children.

El-Dairi M A, Holgado S, Asrani S G, Enyedi L B, Freedman S F


AI Summary

OCT measurements of macular and nerve fiber layer thickness correlated negatively with increasing glaucomatous optic nerve damage in children, suggesting OCT's potential for pediatric glaucoma diagnosis and management.

Abstract

Aim

To compare analysis of macular and nerve fibre layer thickness by optical coherence tomography (OCT) with optic nerve head (ONH) morphology based on stereophotography.

Design

Prospective observational case-control series.

Methods

Normal and glaucomatous eyes of children (age 4-17 years) were scanned using Stratus OCT (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Dublin, California, USA). Fast macular and retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness map were performed on 372 eyes of 222 children. ONH stereophotographs were taken and evaluated by two masked observers using a grading system of 0 to 5 based on both cupping ratio and morphology. OCT3 analyses were compared across ONH grades for different areas around the macula and the peripapillary RNFL.

Results

Analysis included OCT values and ONH grading for 139 eyes of 139 children. There was a negative correlation between ONH grade and both macular thickness and RNFL thickness in all areas measured. There was a difference in the correlation identified for black versus white children.

Conclusion

OCT measurements of RNFL and macular thickness declined with increasing grade of glaucomatous damage seen on stereophotographs in black and white children. Further study will help quantify the value of OCT in the diagnosis and management of paediatric glaucoma.


MeSH Terms

AdolescentCase-Control StudiesChildChild, PreschoolFemaleGlaucomaHumansMacula LuteaMaleNerve FibersOptic DiskRetinal NeuronsSeverity of Illness IndexTomography, Optical Coherence

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