Pulsatile ocular blood flow investigation in asymmetric normal tension glaucoma and normal subjects
Open Access
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in British Journal of Ophthalmology
- Vol. 82 (7), 731-736
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.82.7.731
Abstract
AIMS This study was designed to investigate pulsatile ocular blood flow (POBF) in normal tension glaucoma (NTG) patients and in normal controls. NTG patients with unilateral field loss were evaluated to compare POBF values between eyes with and without field loss. METHODS POBF measurements from more than 1500 subjects were collected during a period of 6 months from six optometric centres. Subjects with systemic vascular diseases (such as systemic hypertension and diabetes), ophthalmic diseases, a positive family history of glaucoma, and those individuals receiving treatment with systemic β blockers were excluded on the basis of a questionnaire. For comparison, 95 NTG patients with unilateral field loss, selected from 403 consecutive patients with NTG, underwent POBF testing. For each individual age, sex, intraocular pressure, refraction, and pulse rate were entered into a database. RESULTS Data from 777 subjects were included in the analysis. POBF measurements of patients and subjects were compared allowing for differences in age, sex, intraocular pressure, refraction, and pulse rate. POBF was significantly lower in eyes of NTG patients with and without field loss (p CONCLUSIONS POBF was significantly lower in eyes of NTG patients with and without field loss than in normal subjects, suggesting that differences in ocular blood perfusion are relevant to the development of NTG and are detectable from the early stage of the disease. Furthermore, the finding of lower POBF in NTG eyes with field loss than in the contralateral eyes with normal field suggests that haemodynamic differences between fellow eyes contribute to determine the side of onset of the disease.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of age, systemic blood pressure, smoking, and blood viscosity on orbital blood velocities.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1995
- Measurement of ocular blood flow velocity using colour doppler imaging in low tension glaucomaEye, 1995
- Ocular blood flow measurement.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1994
- The rate of visual field loss in untreated primary open angle glaucoma.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1993
- Ophthalmic artery flow velocity in glaucomatous and normal subjects.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1993
- Pulsatile ocular blood flow in patients with low tension glaucoma.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1991
- Biostatistical evidence for two distinct chronic open angle glaucoma populations.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1990
- Blood flow in the human eyeActa Ophthalmologica, 1989
- Estimation of pulsatile ocular blood flow from intraocular pressureActa Ophthalmologica, 1989
- A clinical procedure for the measurements of the ocular pulse-pressure relationship and the ophthalmic arterial pressureExperimental Eye Research, 1978