4.3 Article

Effects of Acute Intracranial Pressure Changes on Optic Nerve Head Morphology in Humans and Pig Model

Journal

CURRENT EYE RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 2, Pages 304-311

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/02713683.2021.1952604

Keywords

Optic nerve head morphology; intracranial pressure; intraocular pressure; lamina cribrosa; optical coherence tomography

Categories

Funding

  1. Nebraska Tobacco Settlement Biomedical Research Development Fund 307 (NTSBRDF)
  2. National Eye Institute [K23EY023266]
  3. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [1 U54 GM11545]
  4. Nebraska University Collaboration grant (Nebraska Research Initiative)
  5. Department of Neurological Sciences
  6. Fremont Area Alzheimer's Committee grant

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The study found that acute changes in CSFP/ICP did not have a significant effect on ONH morphological parameters in both humans and pigs, suggesting compensatory and opposing changes in IOP and CSFP/ICP may contribute to the lack of measurable morphological changes in the ONH.
Purpose The lamina cribrosa (LC) is a layer of fenestrated connective tissue tethered to the posterior sclera across the scleral canal in the optic nerve head (ONH). It is located at the interface of intracranial and intraocular compartments and is exposed to intraocular pressure (IOP) anteriorly and intracranial pressure (ICP) or Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure (CSFP) posteriorly. We hypothesize that the pressure difference across LC will determine LC position and meridional diameter of scleral canal (also called Bruch's membrane opening diameter; BMOD). Methods We enrolled 19 human subjects undergoing a medically necessary lumbar puncture (LP) to lower CSFP and 6 anesthetized pigs, whose ICP was increased in 5 mm Hg increments using a lumbar catheter. We imaged ONH using optical coherence tomography and measured IOP and CSFP/ICP at baseline and after each intervention. Radial tomographic ONH scans were analyzed by two independent graders using ImageJ, an open-source software. The following ONH morphological parameters were obtained: BMOD, anterior LC depth and retinal thickness. We modeled effects of acute CSFP/ICP changes on ONH morphological parameters using ANOVA (human study) and generalized linear model (pig study). Results For 19 human subjects, CSFP ranged from 5 to 42 mm Hg before LP and 2 to 19.4 mm Hg after LP. For the six pigs, baseline ICP ranged from 1.5 to 9 mm Hg and maximum stable ICP ranged from 18 to 40 mm Hg. Our models showed that acute CSFP/ICP changes had no significant effect on ONH morphological parameters in both humans and pigs. Conclusion We conclude that ONH does not show measurable morphological changes in response to acute changes of CSFP/ICP. Proposed mechanisms include compensatory and opposing changes in IOP and CSFP/ICP and nonlinear or nonmonotonic effects of IOP and CSFP/ICP across LC.

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