Abstract

To investigate the relationship between blood flow velocity in perifoveal capillaries and retinal thickness at the central fovea in diabetic patients with clinically significant macular edema to elucidate the pathogenesis of diabetic macular edema. Comparative, cross-sectional, prospective study. Participants included diabetic patients with clinically significant macular edema (n = 22), matched diabetic patients without clinically significant macular edema (n = 22), and healthy volunteers (n = 16). Perifoveal capillary blood flow velocity was measured with fluorescein angiography using a scanning laser ophthalmoscope and was analyzed by the tracing method. The severity of perifoveal capillary abnormalities among diabetic patients without clinically significant macular edema was classified by the size and outline of the foveal avascular zone and extent of foveal capillary loss at the baseline by the use of fluorescein angiograms. Retinal thickness at the central fovea was measured by optical coherence tomography. Relationship between perifoveal capillary blood flow velocity and retinal thickness at the central fovea. Perifoveal capillary blood flow velocity was significantly slower in the patients with clinically significant macular edema (0.94+/-0.09 mm/second) compared with the patients without clinically significant macular edema (1.22+/-0.20 mm/second) and the healthy volunteers (1.49+/-0.11 mm/second; P<0.0001). Capillary blood flow velocity negatively correlated with retinal thickness at the central fovea (r = -0.4018, P<0.0001). Capillary blood flow velocity varied among diabetic patients without clinically significant macular edema, and there were significant negative correlations between capillary blood flow velocity and the size of the foveal avascular zone (r = -0.52, P = 0.01), the outline of the foveal avascular zone (r = -0.44, P = 0.04), and the extent of foveal capillary loss (r = -0.51, P = 0.01). The reduction of perifoveal capillary blood flow velocity may occur before the increase of retinal thickness at the central fovea in the diabetic patients. It is possible that long-term reduction of blood flow velocity increases retinal thickness of the macula and may play an important role in the development and the progression of diabetic macular edema.

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