AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to measure oxygen delivery (DO2) and metabolism (MO2) in the retina of healthy individuals and those with sickle cell retinopathy (SCR), exploring the relationship between these factors and potential vision loss.
  • Dual wavelength retinal oximetry and Doppler optical coherence tomography were used to analyze data from 12 healthy controls and 12 SCR patients, focusing on various oxygen content levels and retinal blood flow.
  • Findings showed that while blood flow and venous diameter were higher in SCR patients, their oxygen levels were lower; however, DO2 and MO2 remained similar between groups, indicating that increased blood flow compensates for reduced oxygen content in SCR.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Reduction in inner retinal oxygen delivery (DO2) can cause retinal hypoxia and impair inner retinal oxygen metabolism (MO2), leading to vision loss. The purpose of the current study was to establish measurements of DO2 and MO2 in healthy subjects and test the hypothesis that DO2 and MO2 are reduced in sickle cell retinopathy (SCR) subjects.

Methods: Dual wavelength retinal oximetry and Doppler optical coherence tomography were performed in 12 healthy control and 12 SCR subjects. Images were analyzed to measure retinal arterial and venous oxygen content (O2A and O2V), venous diameter (DV), and total retinal blood flow (TRBF). Retinal arteriovenous oxygen content difference (O2AV), DO2, MO2, and oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) were calculated according to the following equations: O2AV = O2A - O2V; DO2 = TRBF * O2A; MO2 = TRBF * O2AV; OEF = MO2/DO2.

Results: Retinal DV and TRBF were higher in the SCR group as compared to the control group, whereas, O2A, O2V, and O2AV were lower in SCR group as compared to the control group. DO2, MO2, and OEF were not significantly different between control and SCR groups. MO2 and DO2 were linearly related, such that higher MO2 was associated with higher DO2. There was an inverse relationship between TRBF and OEF, such that lower TRBF was associated with higher OEF.

Conclusions: Increased blood flow compensated for decreased oxygen content, thereby maintaining DO2, MO2, and OEF at predominately lower stages of SCR. Quantitative assessment of these parameters has the potential to advance knowledge and improve diagnostic evaluation of retinal ischemic conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5886143PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/iovs.17-23647DOI Listing

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