Association of optic disc pallor and RNFL thickness with cerebral small vessel disease in the PREVENT‐Dementia study

Author:

Gibbon Samuel12ORCID,Low Audrey3,Hamid Charlene12,Reid‐Schachter Megan12,Muniz‐Terrera Graciela4,Ritchie Craig W.1,Trucco Emanuele5,Dhillon Baljean126,O'Brien John T.3,MacGillivray Thomas J.127

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences Chancellor's Building Edinburgh UK

2. Robert O Curle Ophthalmology Suite Institute for Regeneration and Repair Edinburgh UK

3. Department of Psychiatry School of Clinical Medicine University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

4. Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine Ohio University Athens Campus Athens Ohio USA

5. VAMPIRE project, Computing (SSEN) University of Dundee Queen Mother Building Dundee UK

6. Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion Edinburgh UK

7. Edinburgh Imaging The Queen's Medical Research Institute University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

Abstract

AbstractINTRODUCTIONWe tested associations between two retinal measures (optic disc pallor, peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer [pRNFL] thickness) and four magnetic resonance imaging markers of cerebral small vessel disease (SVD; lacunes, microbleeds, white matter hyperintensities, and enlarged perivascular spaces [ePVSs]).METHODSWe used PallorMetrics to quantify optic disc pallor from fundus photographs, and pRNFL thickness from optical coherence tomography scans. Linear and logistic regression assessed relationships between retinal measures and SVD markers. Participants (N = 108, mean age 51.6) were from the PREVENT Dementia study.RESULTSGlobal optic disc pallor was linked to ePVSs in the basal ganglia in both left (β = 0.12, standard error [SE] = 0.05, P < 0.05) and right eyes (β = 0.13, SE = 0.05, P < 0.05). Associations were also noted in different disc sectors. No pRNFL associations with SVD markers were found.DISCUSSIONOptic disc pallor correlated with ePVSs in the basal ganglia, suggesting retinal examination may be a useful method to study brain health changes related to SVD.Highlights Optic disc pallor is linked to enlarged perivascular spaces in basal ganglia. There is no association between peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thickness and cerebral small vessel disease markers. Optic disc examination could provide insights into brain health. The sample included 108 midlife adults from the PREVENT Dementia study.

Publisher

Wiley

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