A total of 1780 patients without symptoms of cerebral ischemia undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) were screened before surgery for carotid stenosis by pneumophlethysmography. An abnormal test was defined as a difference in ophthalmic artery pressures of > or = 5 mmHg or ophthalmic-brachial pressure index < or = 0.69. Some 99 patients (5.6%) had an abnormal ocular pneumoplethysmographic measurement (89 unilateral, ten bilateral). Of these, 26 patients underwent prophylactic carotid endarterectomy before CABG (group 1), while the remaining 73 patients had reconstruction without previous carotid endarterectomy (group 2). A total of 100 patients (group 3) with normal ocular pneumoplethysmographic results were used as controls. The three groups were comparable with respect to age, diabetes, hypertension, smoking and severity of coronary artery disease. Early (30-day) postoperative stroke rates were 0 and 4% (n = 3) for groups 1 and 2 respectively, and 0% for group 3 (P > 0.07). Early mortality rates after CABG for groups 1 and 2 were 4% (n = 1) and 1% (n = 1), respectively and 2% (n = 2) for groups 3 (P > 0.4). Late follow-up (mean 48 months) demonstrated stroke rates of 0% for group 1, and 10% and 4% for groups 2 and 3 (P > 0.08). The early mortality and stroke rates in the ten patients with bilateral abnormal ocular pneumoplethysmographic values were 0 and 0%. However, late strokes occurred significantly more often (43%) in patients with bilateral abnormal results compared with those with unilateral abnormal findings when both groups did not undergo carotid endarterectomy (P < 0.04).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Acta Ophthalmol
February 2019
Department of Ophthalmology, Rigshospitalet, Glostrup, Denmark.
Purpose: To assess retinal perfusion in eyes with unilateral ocular ischaemic syndrome (OIS) and to compare with control subjects.
Methods: Retrospective case series. Linear blood flow velocities in macular vessels were estimated using motion-contrast fundus photography in eight patients with unilateral OIS (eight OIS eyes, seven fellow eyes) and 12 control subjects.
Neurol Res
December 1994
Department of Neurology and Clinical Neurophysiology, Leyenburg Hospital, The Hague, The Netherlands.
In order to establish whether or not the cerebral autoregulation is still effective at blood pressure rates in those who experience a chronic cerebral hypotension 37 patients were subjected to noninvasive CO2 enhanced transcranial Doppler (TCD) and ocular pneumoplethysmographic (OPG-GEE) studies of the middle cerebral and ophthalmic arteries. The patients demonstrating a combination of a unilateral patent internal carotid artery (ICA diameter reduction less than 49%) and a contra-lateral ICA occlusion based on duplex scan examinations were examined. The cerebral blood flow velocities at normocapnia (BFV) and pulsatility indices (PI) were measured by TCD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovasc Surg
April 1994
Department of Surgery, Maimonides Medical Center, New York, New York 11219.
A total of 1780 patients without symptoms of cerebral ischemia undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) were screened before surgery for carotid stenosis by pneumophlethysmography. An abnormal test was defined as a difference in ophthalmic artery pressures of > or = 5 mmHg or ophthalmic-brachial pressure index < or = 0.69.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStroke
January 1993
Neuro-Ophthalmology Service, Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, PA 19107.
Background And Purpose: Ocular pulse amplitude, the amplitude of the ocular pneumoplethysmographic waveform, is altered in several ophthalmologic diseases that disturb ocular blood flow, implying that ocular pulse amplitude may provide an estimate of ocular blood flow. Because ocular blood flow currently cannot be quantified in humans, two experiments were undertaken to evaluate the association of ocular pulse amplitude with total body blood flow.
Methods: In experiment 1, cardiac output was determined by cardiac catheterization in 181 patients who underwent OPG-Gee testing during the same hospitalization.
Arch Neurol
December 1989
Retina Service, Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. 19107.
Little is known about the predictive value of ocular pneumoplethysmography in patients with ophthalmic disease. We evaluated eight patients with unilateral increased intraocular pressure due to neovascular glaucoma who did not have evidence of severe extracranial carotid stenosis by duplex scanning and continuous-wave Doppler ultrasound. The ophthalmic systolic pressure measured by ocular pneumoplethysmography was decreased in the affected eye of all eight patients, indicating that neovascular glaucoma may be a cause of abnormal ocular pneumoplethysmographic results.
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