Liu James C, Green Wesley, Van Stavern Gregory P, Culican Susan M
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO; Indiana University School of Medicine Transitional Residency Program, Indianapolis, IN..
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO.
Can J Ophthalmol. 2017 Aug;52(4):349-354. doi: 10.1016/j.jcjo.2017.01.023.
To evaluate whether the addition of phenylephrine to tropicamide produces any clinically significant change in pupil size during diagnostic eye examination.
Twenty healthy adults at the Washington University School of Medicine Eye Clinic were enrolled in this prospective, nonrandomized, crossover trial. Each had 3 dilating eye drop regimens administered to the left eye on separate days. Tropicamide (T) + proparacaine (PP) + phenylephrine (PE) (T+PP+PE) was considered the standard therapy, to which tropicamide alone (T alone) and tropicamide + proparacaine (T+PP) were compared against. Main outcome measures were postdilation pupil size and proportion of pupils able to achieve adequate clinical pupil dilation of >7 mm. Comparisons were made using Wilcoxon signed-ranked tests and McNemar's test.
Mean postdilation pupil size was 7.94 ± 0.78 mm, 7.64 ± 0.78 mm, and 7.48 ± 0.77 mm for T+PP+PE, T+PP, and T alone, respectively. T+PP+PE was statistically superior to T+PP (p = 0.004) and T alone (p < 0.001) with respect to postdilation pupil size. The proportion of pupils able to achieve adequate pupil dilation of >7 mm was 90%, 80%, and 70% for T+PP+PE, T+PP, and T alone, respectively. No statistical difference was observed in each regimen's ability to achieve adequate pupil dilation of >7 mm (T+PP+PE and T+PP: p = 0.47; T+PP+PE and T alone: p = 0.13).
The addition of phenylephrine eye drops to tropicamide produced larger pupil dilation, but the magnitude of benefit was marginal and clinically insignificant in this young, healthy cohort. A single-dilating-agent regimen using tropicamide could be considered in routine clinical practice.
评估在诊断性眼科检查期间,向托吡卡胺中添加去氧肾上腺素是否会使瞳孔大小产生任何具有临床意义的变化。
华盛顿大学医学院眼科诊所的20名健康成年人参与了这项前瞻性、非随机、交叉试验。每个人在不同日期对左眼使用3种散瞳滴眼液方案。托吡卡胺(T)+丙美卡因(PP)+去氧肾上腺素(PE)(T+PP+PE)被视为标准疗法,并与单独使用托吡卡胺(单独使用T)和托吡卡胺+丙美卡因(T+PP)进行比较。主要观察指标为散瞳后瞳孔大小以及能够实现≥7mm充分临床瞳孔散大的瞳孔比例。使用Wilcoxon符号秩和检验和McNemar检验进行比较。
T+PP+PE、T+PP和单独使用T散瞳后的平均瞳孔大小分别为7.94±0.78mm、7.64±0.78mm和7.48±0.77mm。在散瞳后瞳孔大小方面,T+PP+PE在统计学上优于T+PP(p=0.004)和单独使用T(p<0.001)。能够实现≥7mm充分瞳孔散大的瞳孔比例,T+PP+PE、T+PP和单独使用T分别为90%、80%和70%。在每种方案实现≥7mm充分瞳孔散大的能力方面未观察到统计学差异(T+PP+PE和T+PP:p=0.47;T+PP+PE和单独使用T:p=0.13)。
在托吡卡胺中添加去氧肾上腺素滴眼液可产生更大的瞳孔散大,但在这个年轻健康队列中,获益程度很小且临床意义不大。在常规临床实践中可考虑使用单一散瞳剂方案(使用托吡卡胺)。