AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the impact of pupil dilation using tropicamide on the measurement of retinal blood vessels, focusing on its correlation with brain health indicators and common diseases.
  • Results showed that pupil dilation led to a perceived reduction in retinal vessel width due to decreased image magnification, particularly affecting arteriolar widths.
  • However, after correcting for image magnification, it was determined that tropicamide does not actually alter vessel width in healthy individuals, suggesting it can be safely used in future retinal analyses without bias.

Article Abstract

: The retinal blood vessels reflect changes in the brain's micro-circulation and these changes have been shown to correlate with the incidence of diseases such as stroke, heart disease and Alzheimer's disease. Studies investigating the retinal vasculature routinely use pupil dilation with tropicamide to optimize image acquisition and quality. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of tropicamide on retinal vascular parameters using retinal photography.: The study was performed on 41 healthy young subjects of both sexes, using tropicamide to dilate only the right pupil, leaving the left as a control. Pupil dilation with tropicamide resulted in reduced retinal vessel width measures based on standardized approaches, particularly reduced arteriolar caliber ( < .0005). However, closer investigation of the images revealed reduced fundus image magnification in the post-tropicamide images, based on reduced optic nerve head diameter ( < .0005) and longitudinal analysis with image registration and affine transformation ( < .0001). No change in vessel width parameters was observed after adjustment for image magnification. These results suggest that tropicamide does not change the width of the retinal vessels, however width parameters as measured by standard approaches may be reduced due to image magnification changes resulting from cycloplegia. In this study, improved optic nerve head segmentation for image scale conversion removed the magnification error. With this correction, the tropicamide intervention had no effect on vessel width parameters in young healthy people and could be utilized in future without affecting the results of retinal vascular analysis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09286586.2019.1639198DOI Listing

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