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Nailfold capillary morphology in exfoliation syndrome

Authors :
Cousins, C C
Kang, J H
Bovee, C
Wang, J
Greenstein, S H
Turalba, A
Shen, L Q
Brauner, S
Boumenna, T
Blum, S
Levkovitch-Verbin, H
Ritch, R
Wiggs, J L
Knepper, P A
Pasquale, L R
Source :
Eye; May 2017, Vol. 31 Issue: 5 p698-707, 10p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of the study was to investigate nailfold microvascular morphology in exfoliation syndrome with or without glaucoma (XFS/XFG) compared with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and control subjects using nailfold capillary videomicroscopy.Patients and methodsWe used a JH-1004 capillaroscope to perform nailfold capillary videomicroscopy on the fourth and fifth digit of the non-dominant hand. We enrolled 56 XFS/XFG patients, 87 POAG patients, and 75 control subjects. Masked observers graded the videos for hemorrhages, avascular zones ≥200 microns (μm), and degree of microvascular tortuosity on a four-point subjective scale. Multivariable odds ratios, 95% confidence intervals and P-for trends for assessing the relation between morphological changes and POAG or XFS/XFG were obtained from logistic regression analyses. We also assessed this relation with XFS/XFG compared with POAG in multivariable models.ResultsAfter adjusting for multiple covariates, nailfold hemorrhages, avascular zones ≥200 μm, and higher degree of vascular tortuosity were more common in XFS/XFG vs controls (P-for trend ≤0.0001) and in POAG vs controls (P-for trend ≤0.01). For each 100 capillaries, the number of hemorrhages was similar (P-for trend=0.91) between XFS/XFG and POAG patients; however, there were more avascular zones per 100 capillaries with borderline significance (P-for trend=0.04) in the XFS/XFG group. XFS/XFG patients had more tortuosity than POAG patients; specifically, having a tortuosity score ≥1.5 was associated with a 4.4-fold increased odds of XFS/XFG (95% confidence interval: 1.5–13.3) relative to a tortuosity score <1.0 (P-for trend=0.005).ConclusionA high degree of nailfold capillary tortuosity is a distinct non-ocular feature associated with XFS/XFG compared with either POAG or controls.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0950222X and 14765454
Volume :
31
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Eye
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs41907473
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.2016.312