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Peripapillary retinal blood flow in normal tension glaucoma
  1. Hak Sung Chunga,
  2. Alon Harrisa,
  3. Larry Kagemanna,
  4. Bruce Martinb
  1. aDepartment of Ophthalmology, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, bMedical Sciences Program, Indiana University School of Medicine, Bloomington, Indiana, USA
  1. Alon Harris, PhD, Department of Ophthalmology, Rotary 134, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 4602–6195, USA.

Abstract

AIMS To determine if normal tension glaucoma (NTG) patients differ from age matched controls in blood flow to the peripapillary retina, as measured with confocal scanning laser Doppler flowmetry (cSLDF; “Heidelberg retinal flowmetry”).

METHODS 12 NTG patients and 12 age matched controls were compared using (a) 10 × 10 pixel boxes (the instrument default sample size), taken from the nasal and temporal peripapillary retina, (b) the average from two of these boxes, and (c) every qualifying pixel within the peripapillary retina.

RESULTS Patients and controls did not differ in blood flow measured using the default sample from a single 10 × 10 pixel box, placed in either the temporal or nasal peripapillary retina, or expressed as the average from these two boxes. However, in histograms using every pixel from the peripapillary retina, NTG patients displayed significantly higher percentages of minimal flow pixels (defined as less than one arbitrary unit of flow: 30% v 19%, p <0.01), and significantly lower flow in the 25th, 50th, and 75th percentile flow pixel (each p <0.05) than did age matched controls.

CONCLUSION NTG is characterised by reduced blood flow in the peripapillary retina, a result suggesting that blood flow deficits accompany, and perhaps may contribute to, disease development in these patients.

  • glaucoma
  • retina
  • blood flow
  • laser Doppler flowmeter

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