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Retinal vascular blood flow in patients with retinal vein occlusions

PURPOSE: This study aims to quantify the retinal vascular blood flow in eyes affected by unilateral central retinal vein occlusions (CRVO) or branch retinal vein occlusions (BRVO). We created and explored a new, unitless metric for the severity of these diseases: relative blood flow (RBF). We then contextualized RBF in terms of patient demographics, ocular presentation and other systemic conditions, as well as explored its efficacy as a predictor of future outcomes.
METHODS: Data was collected from 20 control subjects and 32 patients with clinically diagnosed retinal vein occlusions (15 CRVO and 17 BRVO). Laser speckle flowgraphy was then used to quantify retinal vascular blood flow in terms of mean blur rate, a metric shown to be highly heterogeneous between patients but fairly consistent in intra-patient repeated measurements over time. After confirming this and establishing a strong correlation between a healthy patient’s two eyes, we used an RVO patient’s fellow eye as a nondiseased expectation and presented relative blood flow as the ratio between their diseased and healthy eye. We then correlated this data with demographic variables and disease characteristics from patients’ medical history.
RESULTS: We found an average blood flow decrease of 26% in CRVO eyes relative to healthy eyes in the same patients and an average decrease of 7% in BRVO eyes. In CRVO, duration of occlusion, central macular thickness, intraocular pressure, diabetes, previous laser and injection treatments, and an injection within three months after blood flow measurement were significantly associated with relative blood flow. In BRVO, no demographic variables or disease characteristics were significantly associated with relative blood flow.
CONCLUSIONS: Relative blood flow represents a promising new, consistent and informative metric for quantifying the severity of unilateral retinal vein occlusions. With both descriptive and predictive properties in eyes with CRVO, future work should explore its great potential.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/41283
Date10 July 2020
CreatorsKoch, Rachelle Elif
ContributorsSymes, Karen, Arroyo, Jorge G.
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation
RightsAttribution 4.0 International, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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