Factors associated with deep circulation in the peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy zone in normal-tension glaucoma with myopic disc.
Kiyota Naoki, Kunikata Hiroshi, Takahashi Seri, Shiga Yukihiro, Omodaka Kazuko, Nakazawa Toru
AI Summary
This study found deep microcirculation (PPA-CI) in peripapillary atrophy relates to age, axial length, and visual function in myopic NTG, suggesting it's a biomarker for parafoveal scotoma.
Abstract
Purpose
To investigate factors associated with choroidal microcirculation in the peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy (PPA) zone in eyes with normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) and myopic disc.
Methods
In 100 eyes of 100 NTG patients with myopic disc and 20 eyes of 20 age-matched myopic controls, 4.5 × 4.5 mm scans were made of the optic nerve head with optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA). Peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy (PPA) area and PPA superficial choroidal image intensity (PPA-CI) were calculated with image j software. Clinical characteristics, laser speckle flowgraphy-measured mean blur rate in the temporal tissue area (temporal MT), the central thresholds (the averaged standard automated perimetry-measured visual field thresholds in the four paracentral points) and 3D-OCT-measured ganglion cell complex thickness in the papillomacular bundle (PMB-GCCT) were recorded.
Results
The NTG patients had significantly lower intraocular pressure, PMB-GCCT and central threshold values, and a larger PPA area, than the controls. The area under the receiver operating characteristics curve to differentiate NTG with parafoveal scotoma (PFS) from controls was 0.76 for temporal MT, 0.85 for PPA-CI and 0.87 for PMB-GCCT. Univariate and multivariate analyses revealed that PPA-CI was negatively correlated with age, pulse rate, best-corrected visual acuity, axial length and PPA area, and positively correlated with temporal MT, PMB-GCCT and the central thresholds.
Conclusion
Peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy (PPA)-CI was associated with temporal MT, ageing, bradycardia, axial length elongation and changes in central retinal structure and visual function in patients with NTG and myopic disc. Thus, microcirculation deep within the PPA zone might be a clinically useful biomarker of PFS in NTG.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts5
Normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) patients with myopic disc (100 eyes of 100 patients) had significantly lower intraocular pressure, lower papillomacular bundle ganglion cell complex thickness (PMB-GCCT), lower central threshold values, and a larger peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy (PPA) area compared to age-matched myopic controls (20 eyes of 20 patients).
The area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC) to differentiate normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) with parafoveal scotoma (PFS) from controls was 0.76 for temporal mean blur rate (temporal MT), 0.85 for peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy superficial choroidal image intensity (PPA-CI), and 0.87 for papillomacular bundle ganglion cell complex thickness (PMB-GCCT) in a study of 100 NTG patients and 20 controls.
Univariate and multivariate analyses revealed that peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy superficial choroidal image intensity (PPA-CI) was negatively correlated with age, pulse rate, best-corrected visual acuity, axial length, and peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy (PPA) area in 100 normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) patients with myopic disc.
Univariate and multivariate analyses revealed that peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy superficial choroidal image intensity (PPA-CI) was positively correlated with temporal mean blur rate (temporal MT), papillomacular bundle ganglion cell complex thickness (PMB-GCCT), and central thresholds in 100 normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) patients with myopic disc.
Microcirculation deep within the peripapillary chorioretinal atrophy (PPA) zone, as measured by PPA superficial choroidal image intensity (PPA-CI), might be a clinically useful biomarker of parafoveal scotoma (PFS) in normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) patients with myopic disc.
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