Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine whether quantitative differences in systemic hypercoagulable state could be identified among patients with retinal vein occlusion at various sites of occlusion. METHODS: The value of thrombin–antithrombin III complex was determined in 57 patients with retinal vein occlusion within 1 month after the subjective onset of retinal vein occlusion and in 15 age-matched normal controls. RESULTS: Levels of log thrombin–antithrombin III complex were significantly higher in the patients with proximal retinal vein occlusion in which the occlusion site is at the optic disc (mean ± SD, 0.493 ± 0.389) than in those with distal retinal vein occlusion in which the occlusion site is away from the optic disc (0.312 ± 0.150, P = .025) and in the normal controls (0.294 ± 0.151, P = .020). There was no significant difference between the distal retinal vein occlusion and the normal controls ( P = .720). More patients with proximal retinal vein occlusion showed elevated thrombin–antithrombin III complex values more than 3.9 ng/ml than those with distal retinal vein occlusion (8/29 vs 1/28, P = .025). Of nine patients showing an initial value of thrombin–antithrombin III complex of more than 3.9 ng/ml, repeated measurements were obtained in eight patients, who showed reduced value of thrombin–antithrombin III complex in the normal range in several months. CONCLUSIONS: A systemic hypercoagulable state, which could be demonstrated with the elevation of thrombin–antithrombin III complex value, may contribute more to the development of retinal vein occlusion with thrombus at or near the trunk of the central retinal vein than those with thrombus at branch veins away from the optic disc in the retina.

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