Article Text
Abstract
Measurements of the intraocular pressure (IOP) pulse and pulsatile ocular blood flow (POBF) have been made in 22 patients with bilateral low tension glaucoma (LTG) and 29 healthy subjects matched as closely as possible for age, refractive error, IOP, systemic pulse pressure, and heart rate. Recordings were made in both the standing and supine positions. The amplitude of the intraocular pressure pulse was significantly lower in patients with LTG (1.2, SEM 0.1 mmHg standing, and 1.3, SEM 0.1 mmHg lying) than in healthy subjects (1.9, SEM 0.1 mmHg standing, and 2.0 SEM 0.1 mmHg lying): p less than 0.001 standing and p less than 0.002 lying. Measurement of POBF also showed a significant reduction between the healthy subjects (428 (31) SEM microliters/min standing and 345 (28) SEM microliters/min lying) and subjects with LTG (301 (27) SEM microliters/min standing and 249 (24) SEM microliters/min lying), p less than 0.005 standing and p less than 0.02 lying. This represents a difference of approximately 30% between the two groups in either posture. A close non-parametric correlation existed between the level of IOP and the POBF (r = 0.75, p less than 0.001 standing, and r = -0.55, p less than 0.02 lying). Such a correlation was not present in the healthy subjects. A reduction in POBF occurred in both groups on assuming the supine posture (healthy subjects 83 (16) SEM microliters/min, LTG subjects 52 (17) SEM microliters/min). These figures represent reductions of 19% and 17% respectively in comparison with the standing value. The results lend further confirmation to the hypothesis that vascular factors are associated with low tension glaucoma.