Abstract

Aims/Purpose: The associations between ERM and glaucoma were suggested in several studies. In an animal model undergoing intermittent IOP elevations, a reactive gliosis, a phenotype of ERM, was found in the optic nerve head. We investigated the association between intraocular pressure (IOP) fluctuation and idiopathic ERM in patients with glaucoma or glaucoma suspect.Methods: In this retrospective study, a total of 84 patients with glaucoma or glaucoma suspect were included. Among them, forty one patients had no ERM and forty three patients had ERM. Long‐term fluctuation of IOP was defined as the standard deviation (SD) of IOP at all visits. Patients were divided into two groups according to the median value of SD of IOP: the low IOP fluctuation group and high IOP fluctuation group. Among patients with available heart rate variability (HRV) data, the relationship between the HRV parameter and IOP fluctuation was analysed.Results: Patients with ERM was older and had higher IOP fluctuation and higher proportion of having history of cataract surgery and greater macular thickness (p = 0.018, 0.049, 0.013, < 0.001). The high IOP fluctuation group showed higher proportion of patients with ERM (62.5%) than the low IOP fluctuation group (36.4%, p = 0.028). In the multiple logistic analysis, higher IOP fluctuation group were associated with the presence of ERM (p = 0.047). Among patients with ERM, eyes with stage 3 or 4 ERM had worse visual field defects based on mean deviation than those with stage 1 or 2 ERM (p = 0.025). The high IOP fluctuation group showed higher level of low frequency HRV, an index of sympathetic cardiac control than the low IOP fluctuation group (p = 0.027). Intereye comparison in eyes with ERM and the fellow eyes without ERM, eyes with ERM (2.2 ± 0.9 mmHg) had higher fluctuation of IOP than those without ERM (2.0 ± 0.8 mmHg, p = 0.029).Conclusions: In conclusion, long‐term IOP fluctuation had the relevance to idiopathic ERM in patients with glaucoma or glaucoma suspect. In glaucoma patients with ERM, more advanced stage ERMs were associated with worse visual field damage. Further studies are needed to determine if long‐term IOP fluctuation affects the progression of glaucoma and ERM.

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