Gaze-Evoked Deformations in Optic Nerve Head Drusen: Repetitive Shearing as a Potential Factor in the Visual and Vascular Complications.
Sibony Patrick A, Wei Junchao, Sigal Ian A
AI Summary
Ocular movements cause significant shearing deformations in optic nerve head drusen, similar to healthy eyes, suggesting this repetitive stress may contribute to ONHD's visual and vascular complications.
Abstract
Purpose
To determine if ocular ductions deform intrapapillary and peripapillary tissues in optic nerve head drusen (ONHD) and to compare these deformations with healthy eyes and eyes with other optic neuropathies.
Design
Observational case series.
Participants
Twenty patients with ONHD.
Methods
Axial rasters of the optic nerve from a spectral-domain OCT device (Cirrus 5000; Carl Zeiss Meditec, Inc, Dublin, CA) were used to analyze the shape of the peripapillary basement membrane (ppBM) layer in 20 confirmed cases of ONHD. We compared registered images obtained from 2 eye positions: 10° to 15° in adduction and 30° to 40° in abduction. Geometric morphometrics was used to analyze the shape of the ppBM layer defined by placing 10 equidistant landmarks extending 2500 μm on both sides of the basement membrane opening. We also adapted an image strain tracking technique to measure regional intrapapillary strains in 6 patients. Using manually placed nodes on the reference image (in adduction), an iterative, block-matching algorithm is used to determine local displacements between the reference and its paired image in abduction. Displacement vectors were used to calculate the mean shear and effective strain (percent change).
Main outcome measures
Peripapillary shape deformations, intrapapillary shear strains, and effective strains.
Results
We found a statistically significant difference in the shape of the ppBM layer between abduction and adduction (P < 0.01). The deformation was characterized by a relative posterior displacement temporally in adduction that reversed in abduction. Strain tracking in all 6 patients showed substantial gaze-induced shearing and effective strains. Mean effective strains were 7.5% outside the drusen. Shear and effective strains were significantly larger outside versus within the drusen (P < 0.003 and P < 0.01, respectively).
Conclusions
This study demonstrates that horizontal ocular ductions induce significant shearing deformations of the peripapillary retina and prelaminar intrapapillary tissues. We also found that the deformations in healthy persons are similar in magnitude to ONHD. Based on these findings, we speculate that patients with intrapapillary calcifications exposed to the long-term effects of repetitive shearing (induced by ocular ductions) may contribute to the progressive axonal loss and vascular complications associated with ONHD.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts6
Horizontal ocular ductions induce significant shearing deformations of the peripapillary retina and prelaminar intrapapillary tissues in patients with optic nerve head drusen (ONHD).
A statistically significant difference in the shape of the peripapillary basement membrane (ppBM) layer was found between abduction and adduction (P < 0.01) in patients with optic nerve head drusen (ONHD), characterized by a relative posterior displacement temporally in adduction that reversed in abduction.
Strain tracking in 6 patients with optic nerve head drusen (ONHD) showed substantial gaze-induced shearing and effective strains, with mean effective strains of 7.5% outside the drusen.
Shear and effective strains were significantly larger outside versus within the drusen (P < 0.003 and P < 0.01, respectively) in patients with optic nerve head drusen (ONHD).
The deformations in healthy persons are similar in magnitude to those observed in optic nerve head drusen (ONHD).
Repetitive shearing induced by ocular ductions in patients with intrapapillary calcifications may contribute to the progressive axonal loss and vascular complications associated with optic nerve head drusen (ONHD).
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