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Comparison of the Morphology of the Foveal Pit Between African and Caucasian Populations. | LitMetric

Comparison of the Morphology of the Foveal Pit Between African and Caucasian Populations.

Transl Vis Sci Technol

Steele Center for Translational Medicine, John A. Moran Eye Center, Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to analyze the foveal pit structure in a Ghanaian population and compare it with a Caucasian group, assessing age-related changes in both.
  • Optical coherence tomography scans of 84 Ghanaians and 37 Caucasians were used to measure the foveal pit's depth, width, slope, and volume, factoring in variables like age, sex, and ethnicity.
  • Results revealed significant differences in the foveal morphology between the two groups, with Ghanaians exhibiting greater width and volume, especially in women, highlighting the importance of these anatomical variations in understanding retinal diseases among different ethnicities.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to characterize foveal pit morphology in an African (Ghanaian) population, to compare it to that of a Caucasian group and to determine if it varied with age in the two populations.

Methods: The depth, diameter, slope, and volume of the foveal pit were interpolated from optical coherence tomography volume scans recorded in 84 Ghanaian and 37 Caucasian individuals. Their association with age, sex, and ethnicity was investigated using multilevel regression models.

Results: The foveal pit differed significantly in width, slope, and volume between Ghanaian men and women ( < 0.001), but only in width and volume between Caucasian men and women ( < 0.01). In Ghanaians, age was associated with a narrowing of the foveal depression and a reduction of its volume. Overall, these changes were more pronounced in women as compared to men and were largely absent from the Caucasian group. When controlled for age, the foveal pit of Ghanaians was significantly wider and larger in volume as compared to the Caucasian group ( < 0.001).

Conclusions: The morphology of the foveal pit differs between African and Caucasian individuals. These anatomic differences should be considered when examining differences in prevalence and clinical features of vitreoretinal disorders involving the fovea between the two populations.

Translational Relevance: Differences in retinal anatomy may partly explain variations in the prevalence and clinical features of retinal diseases between Africans and Caucasians. Such differences should be adequately considered in diagnoses and monitoring of ocular diseases in patients with African ancestry.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7401974PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/tvst.9.5.24DOI Listing

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