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Importance: Rapid initial optic nerve head capillary density loss may be used to assess the risk of glaucoma visual field progression.
Objective: To investigate the association between the rate of initial optic nerve head capillary density loss from optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) and visual field progression.
Design, Setting, Participants: This was a retrospective study of a longitudinal cohort at a glaucoma referral center. A total of 167 eyes (96 with primary open-angle glaucoma and 71 with glaucoma suspect) of 109 patients were monitored for a mean (SD) of 5.7 (1.4) years from January 2015 to December 2022. Data analysis was undertaken in April 2023.
Main Outcomes And Measures: The rates of initial capillary density and average retinal nerve fiber layer loss were calculated from the first 3 optic nerve head OCTA and OCT scans, respectively, during the initial follow-up (mean [SD], 2.0 [1.0] years). Based on the median rate, eyes were categorized into fast and slow progressor groups. The association between initial capillary density change or retinal nerve fiber layer thinning and visual field progression was evaluated using linear-mixed and time-varying Cox models.
Results: A total of 167 eyes of 109 patients (mean [SD] age, 69.0 [11.1] years; 56 [51.4%] female and 53 [48.6%] male) were assessed. Eighty-three eyes were slow OCTA progressors, while 84 eyes were fast with mean capillary density loss of -0.45% per year and -1.17% per year, respectively (mean difference, -0.72%/year; 95% CI,-0.84 to -0.60; P < .001). Similarly, 83 eyes were slow OCT progressors, while 84 eyes were fast with mean retinal nerve fiber layer thinning of -0.09 μm per year and -0.60 μm per year, respectively (mean difference, -0.51 μm/year; 95% CI,-0.59 to -0.43; P < .001). The fast OCTA and OCT progressors were associated with more rapid visual field loss (mean difference, -0.18 dB/year; 95% CI,-0.30 to -0.06; P = .004 and -0.17 dB/year; 95% CI,-0.29 to -0.06; P = .002, respectively). Fast OCTA progressing eyes were more likely to have visual field progression (hazard ratio, 1.96; 95% CI, 1.04-3.69; P = .04). Seventeen of 52 eyes (32.7%; 95% CI, 32.5-32.8) with fast OCTA and OCT progression developed subsequent visual field likely progression.
Conclusion And Relevance: Rapid initial optic nerve head capillary density loss from OCTA was associated with a faster rate of visual field progression and a doubling of the risk of developing event progression in this study. These findings may support clinical use of OCTA and OCT optic nerve head measurements for risk assessment of glaucoma progression.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2024.0906 | DOI Listing |
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
September 2025
Division of Biomedical Physics, Office of Science and Engineering Laboratories, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland, United States.
Purpose: To assess macular choriocapillaris (CC) metrics in healthy volunteers (HVs) without ocular disease and demonstrate CC variations in patients with inherited retinal dystrophies (IRDs) using adaptive optics optical coherence tomography angiography (AO-OCTA).
Methods: Twenty-one HVs and three IRD patients were imaged. Macular variation in 20 HVs in CC metrics (CC density, CC diameter, CC tortuosity, void diameter, void area, lobule count, lobule area, and RPE-CC distance) were assessed by imaging a 28° strip of overlapping AO-OCTA volumes (3° × 3°) from the optic nerve head to the temporal macula.
Biol Lett
September 2025
Department of Science, Roma Tre University, Rome, Italy.
In the past decades, several authors have investigated the possibility that genome size is correlated with metabolic rates, obtaining conflicting results. The main biological explanation among the supporters of this correlation was related to the nucleotypic effect of the genome size, which, determining the cellular volume and hence the surface area-to-volume ratio, influences cellular metabolism. In the present study, I tested a different hypothesis: genome size, influencing red blood cell (RBC) volume, is correlated with capillary density and diameter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetes Obes Metab
September 2025
Department of Pharmacology, Kagawa University, Kagawa, Japan.
Aim: Sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors consistently demonstrate renal protection against progressive kidney disease. We hypothesised that SGLT2 inhibition reduces blood glucose levels in peri-proximal tubular capillaries by limiting reabsorption from the tubular filtrate, thereby safeguarding the renal microvasculature from hyperglycaemic stress.
Materials And Methods: In anaesthetised streptozotocin-induced type 1 and Otsuka-Long Evans fatty (OLETF) type 2 diabetic rats, we measured the arterial-to-renal venous glucose ratio (RV/A) to evaluate the effects of canagliflozin, a SGLT2 inhibitor.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
September 2025
Division of Pediatric Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Right ventricular (RV) failure is the primary cause of death among patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Patients with congenital heart disease-associated PAH (CHD-PAH) demonstrate improved outcomes compared to patients with other forms of PAH, which is related to the maintenance of an adaptively hypertrophied RV. In an ovine model of CHD-PAH, we aimed to elucidate the cellular, microvascular, and transcriptional adaptations to congenital pressure overload that support RV function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRMD Open
September 2025
Department of Rheumatology and Department of Internal Medicine, Ghent University Hospital, Unit for Molecular Immunology and Inflammation, Flemish Institute for Biotechnology, Inflammation Research Center, University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium.
Objectives: To evaluate whether patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) have different nailfold videocapillaroscopy (NVC) findings compared with healthy controls (HCs) and whether there is an association between NVC abnormalities and disease activity, clinical and/or laboratory features in SLE.
Methods: This is an observational, multicentre, international, matched case-control study. 381 subjects (203 patients with SLE and 178 HCs) were enrolled from 16 centres in 10 countries.