4.7 Article

The Effect of Ametropia on Glaucomatous Visual Field Loss

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm10132796

Keywords

glaucoma; ametropia; myopia; hyperopia; visual field; OCT; SITA standard 24-2; pattern deviation; mean deviation; spherical equivalent

Funding

  1. NIH [R01EY025253, R21EY030142, R21EY030631, R01EY030575, R01EY015473, K99EY028631]
  2. Bright Focus Foundation
  3. Lions Foundation
  4. Grimshaw-Gudewicz Foundation
  5. Research to Prevent Blindness
  6. Harvard Glaucoma Center of Excellence
  7. Eleanor and Miles Shore Fellowship
  8. Alice Adler Fellowship
  9. NIH NEI Core Grant [P30EY003790]

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The study explored the relationship between ametropia and patterns of visual field loss in glaucoma. Myopia was associated with decreased PD at paracentral and temporal VF locations, while hyperopia was linked to decreased PD at Bjerrum and nasal step locations. The severity of VF loss modulated the effect of ametropia.
Myopia has been discussed as a risk factor for glaucoma. In this study, we characterized the relationship between ametropia and patterns of visual field (VF) loss in glaucoma. Reliable automated VFs (SITA Standard 24-2) of 120,019 eyes from 70,495 patients were selected from five academic institutions. The pattern deviation (PD) at each VF location was modeled by linear regression with ametropia (defined as spherical equivalent (SE) starting from extreme high myopia), mean deviation (MD), and their interaction (SE x MD) as regressors. Myopia was associated with decreased PD at the paracentral and temporal VF locations, whereas hyperopia was associated with decreased PD at the Bjerrum and nasal step locations. The severity of VF loss modulated the effect of ametropia: with decreasing MD and SE, paracentral/nasal step regions became more depressed and Bjerrum/temporal regions less depressed. Increasing degree of myopia was positively correlated with VF depression at four central points, and the correlation became stronger with increasing VF loss severity. With worsening VF loss, myopes have increased VF depressions at the paracentral and nasal step regions, while hyperopes have increased depressions at the Bjerrum and temporal locations. Clinicians should be aware of these effects of ametropia when interpreting VF loss.

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