Abstract

This study is to evaluate the correlation between retrobulbar perfusion deficits and glaucomatous visual field defects. Eighty-four patients with glaucoma and 17 normal subjects serving as controls were selected. Color Doppler imaging (CDI) was used to measure the changes in blood flow parameters in the retrobulbar ophthalmic artery (OA), central retinal artery (CRA), and short posterior ciliary arteries (SPCAs). Visual field testing was performed using a Humphrey perimeter, categorizing the visual field deficits into four stages according to the Advanced Glaucoma Intervention Study (AGIS) scoring method. Subsequently, the correlation of retrobulbar hemodynamic parameter alterations among glaucomatous patients with varying visual field defects was examined. The higher the visual field stage, the lower the peak systolic velocity (PSV) of the OA, CRA, and SPCAs in glaucomatous patients. The CRA had the highest sensitivity to changes in its PSV. The PSV of the temporal SPCA (TSPCA-PSV) was lower in advanced glaucoma than in early-stage glaucoma. The PSVs of the OA, CRA, and TSPCA, as well as the resistance index of the CRA (CRA-RI), were positively correlated with the visual field index and the mean deviation. Except for that of OA, the PSV of the retrobulbar vessels was negatively correlated with the pattern standard deviation (PSD). The OA-PSV and end-diastolic velocity (EDV) of the CRA and TSPCA were lower in patients with superior visual field defects than in those with inferior visual field defects. Greater severity of visual field defects corresponded to poorer retrobulbar blood flow in glaucomatous patients. Patients suffered significant perfusion impairments in the CRA at the early stage, accompanied by SPCA perfusion disorder at the advanced stage. The presence of a bow-shaped defect in the superior or inferior region of the visual field in moderate-stage glaucoma was closely correlated with retrobulbar vascular EDV. ChiCTR2200059048 (2022-04-23).

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