Neely David, Zarubina Anna V, Clark Mark E, Huisingh Carrie E, Jackson Gregory R, Zhang Yuhua, McGwin Gerald, Curcio Christine A, Owsley Cynthia
*Department of Ophthalmology, School of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama;†MacuLogix, Hummelstown, Pennsylvania; and‡Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama.
Retina. 2017 Jul;37(7):1329-1336. doi: 10.1097/IAE.0000000000001454.
To examine the association between subretinal drusenoid deposits (SDDs) identified by multimodal retinal imaging and visual function in older eyes with normal macular health or in the earliest phases of age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
Age-related macular degeneration status for each eye was defined according to the Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) 9-step classification system (normal = Step 1, early AMD = Steps 2-4) based on color fundus photographs. Visual functions measured were best-corrected photopic visual acuity, contrast and light sensitivity, mesopic visual acuity, low-luminance deficit, and rod-mediated dark adaptation. Subretinal drusenoid deposits were identified through multimodal imaging (color fundus photographs, infrared reflectance and fundus autofluorescence images, and spectral domain optical coherence tomography).
The sample included 1,202 eyes (958 eyes with normal health and 244 eyes with early AMD). In normal eyes, SDDs were not associated with any visual function evaluated. In eyes with early AMD, dark adaptation was markedly delayed in eyes with SDDs versus no SDD (a 4-minute delay on average), P = 0.0213. However, this association diminished after age adjustment, P = 0.2645. Other visual functions in early AMD eyes were not associated with SDDs.
In a study specifically focused on eyes in normal macular health and in the earliest phases of AMD, early AMD eyes with SDDs have slower dark adaptation, largely attributable to the older ages of eyes with SDD; they did not exhibit deficits in other visual functions. Subretinal drusenoid deposits in older eyes in normal macular health are not associated with any visual functions evaluated.
通过多模态视网膜成像检查正常黄斑健康或年龄相关性黄斑变性(AMD)最早阶段的老年眼中视网膜下玻璃膜疣样沉积物(SDD)与视觉功能之间的关联。
根据年龄相关性眼病研究(AREDS)9步分类系统(正常=第1步,早期AMD=第2 - 4步),基于彩色眼底照片确定每只眼睛的年龄相关性黄斑变性状态。测量的视觉功能包括最佳矫正明视觉视力、对比度和光敏感度、中间视觉视力、低亮度缺陷以及视杆介导的暗适应。通过多模态成像(彩色眼底照片、红外反射和眼底自发荧光图像以及光谱域光学相干断层扫描)识别视网膜下玻璃膜疣样沉积物。
样本包括1202只眼睛(958只健康正常眼睛和244只早期AMD眼睛)。在正常眼睛中,SDD与所评估的任何视觉功能均无关联。在早期AMD眼睛中,有SDD的眼睛与无SDD的眼睛相比,暗适应明显延迟(平均延迟4分钟),P = 0.0213。然而,年龄调整后这种关联减弱,P = 0.2645。早期AMD眼睛的其他视觉功能与SDD无关。
在一项专门针对正常黄斑健康和AMD最早阶段眼睛的研究中,有SDD的早期AMD眼睛暗适应较慢,这在很大程度上归因于有SDD的眼睛年龄较大;它们在其他视觉功能方面未表现出缺陷。正常黄斑健康的老年眼中视网膜下玻璃膜疣样沉积物与所评估的任何视觉功能均无关联。