4.6 Article

In Vivo Human Choroidal Thickness Measurements: Evidence for Diurnal Fluctuations

Journal

INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 5-12

Publisher

ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1167/iovs.08-1779

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Pennsylvania Lions Club
  2. Ethel B. Foerderer Fund for Excellence
  3. Research to Prevent Blindness
  4. Paul and Evanina Bell Mackall Foundation Trust
  5. National Institutes of Health/National Eye Institute [EY00402, EY01583, EY07354]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

PURPOSE. The authors applied partial coherence interferometry (PCI) to estimate the thickness of the human choroid in vivo and to learn whether it fluctuates during the day. METHODS. By applying signal processing techniques to existing PCI tracings of human ocular axial length measurements, a signal modeling algorithm was developed and validated to determine the position and variability of a postretinal peak that, by analogy to animal studies, likely corresponds to the choroidal/scleral interface. The algorithm then was applied to diurnal axial eye length datasets. RESULTS. The postretinal peak was identified in 28% of subjects in the development and validation datasets, with mean subfoveal choroidal thicknesses of 307 and 293 mu m, respectively. Twenty-eight of 40 diurnal PCI datasets had at least two time points with identifiable postretinal peaks, yielding a mean choroidal thickness of 426 mu m and a mean high-low difference in choroidal thickness of 59.5 +/- 24.2 mu m (range, 25.9 - 103 mu m). The diurnal choroidal thickness fluctuation was larger than twice the SE of measurement (24.5 mu m) in 16 of these 28 datasets. Axial length and choroidal thickness tended to fluctuate in antiphase. CONCLUSIONS. Signal processing techniques provide choroidal thickness estimates in many, but not all, PCI datasets of axial eye measurements. Based on eyes with identifiable postretinal peaks at more than one time in a day, choroidal thickness varied over the day. Because of the established role of the choroid in retinal function and its possible role in regulating eye growth, further development and refinement of clinical methods to measure its thickness are warranted. (Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2009; 50: 5 - 12) DOI: 10.1167/iovs.08-1779

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available