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Retinal oxygen metabolism in healthy subjects and glaucoma patients.

Authors :
Olafsdottir, Olof Birna
Vandewalle, Evelien
Pinto, Luis Abegão
Geirsdottir, Asbjorg
De Clerck, Eline
Stalmans, Peter
Gottfredsdottir, Maria
Kristjansdottir, Jona Valgerdur
Van Calster, Joachim
Zeyen, Thierry
Stefánsson, Einar
Stalmans, Ingeborg
Source :
British Journal of Ophthalmology; Mar2014, Vol. 98 Issue 3, p329-333, 5p, 1 Color Photograph, 2 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background To test whether retinal oxygen metabolism is different in glaucoma patients compared with healthy subjects. Methods This was a two-centre study where retinal vessel oxygen saturation was measured in glaucoma patients and healthy individuals with a non-invasive spectrophotometric retinal oximeter. Visual fields were obtained in the glaucoma patients. Results No statistical difference was found in retinal oxygen saturation in arterioles ( p=0.16), venules (p=0.16) and arteriovenous difference (p=0.24) when all glaucoma patients (n=74) were compared with healthy individuals (n=89). When patients with advanced glaucoma (visual field mean defect (MD ⩾ 10 dB, n=21)) were compared with healthy individuals, the oxygen saturation in venules was higher in glaucoma patients (58.2%±5.4% vs 53.8%±6.4%; p=0.0054, mean±SD) and the arteriovenous difference was lower in glaucoma patients (36.4%±4.7% vs 39.5%±5.7%; p=0.021). In glaucoma patients with mild glaucoma (visual field MD ⩾ 5 dB, n=33), no statistical differences were found in retinal oxygen saturation compared with healthy individuals. Conclusions Glaucoma patients with advanced glaucoma have higher oxygen saturation in venules and lower arteriovenous difference in oxygen saturation compared with healthy individuals. The decreased arteriovenous difference in severe glaucoma may be related to lower oxygen consumption secondary to neuropathy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071161
Volume :
98
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
British Journal of Ophthalmology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
94565093
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bjophthalmol-2013-303162