Abstract

We evaluated the relationship between the size of the peripapillary crescent and the axial length (AL) of the eye as well as the fine structure of the peripapillary crescent in selected eyes. Infrared fundus imaging and spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SDOCT) (Spectralis HRA + OCT, Heidelberg Engineering, Germany) centered at the fovea were performed on 72 healthy adults. On the infrared fundus images, we measured (a) the distance between the foveola and the temporal edge of the optic disc (FOD) and (b) the distance between the foveola and the temporal edge of the peripapillary crescent (FOC) (if present). A peripapillary crescent presented at the nasal margin of the disc in 64% of the subjects. The FOD and FOC were 4.22 mm ± 0.46 and 3.97 mm ± 0.25, respectively. Only the FOD was significantly correlated with axial length. As AL increased by 10%, the FOD increased by 13%, the outer neural retina only expanded by 4% (as indicated by the FOC). This result emphasizes that retinal stretching may not mirror scleral growth, and the existence in some eyes of a difference between the photoreceptor margin and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) margin suggests that within the retina there could be slippage during eye growth.

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