Purpose To analyze dynamics of retinal vessel dilation response to flicker light in patients with glaucoma and ocular hypertension. Patients and methods Response to flicker light was measured in retinal vessels by means of Retinal Vessel Analyzer. After the baseline 50 seconds long diameter recording of inferior and superior temporal artery and vein, three flicker stimulations of 20 seconds duration was applied, with a 80 seconds break in between. Area under the curve of the vessel diameter (AUC) was compared during 3 flicker periods in the open angle glaucoma patients group (POAG, n=47) and ocular hypertensives (OHT, n=46) and age-matched healthy controls (n=56) Results POAG eyes demonstrated smaller response of all vessels to flicker light in general than the other two groups (p=0.0008), but the response dynamics was significantly different between the groups (p=0.038), showing in three flicker periods a delayed increasing response in the POAG and OHT groups, and remaining stable in healthy subjects. Conclusion General vessel response to flicker light was decreased in POAG patients despite the slow improvement in repeated flicker stimulation, indicating an altered response pattern.
Baseline ChBF was lower in both the POAG and the OHT patients, compared with that in the controls. The stronger increase in ChBF in POAG patients in the face of an exercise-induced blood pressure increase indicates less active regulatory capacity in glaucoma patients.
General vessel response to flicker light was decreased in POAG patients, compared to normal controls and OHT patients. In contrast to significant correlation between the two contralateral eyes of the flicker response itself, only its borderline correlation to IOP was seen. There was no correlation to the level of damage, altogether indicating a systemic dysregulation phenomenon. GRANTS: Swiss National Foundation Grant 3200B0-113685, Velux Stiftung Grant, Freie Akademische Gesellschaft (FAG) Grant, Pfizer Inc. Grant CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION REFERENCE NUMBER: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00430209.
Vascular responsiveness to flicker light decreases with age in healthy individuals, in glaucoma patients and in OHT patients. This effect seems to be comparable between the tested groups, and age-related change in vascular responsiveness to flicker light seems an unlikely risk factor for glaucoma.
Despite small differences between the morphologic and functional glaucomatous damage, IOP and perfusion parameters seem to contribute, at least in part, independently to both.
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