The Haemodialysis Session Effect on the Choroidal Thickness and Retinal and Choroidal Microcirculation—A Literature Review

Author:

Roskal-Wałek Joanna12ORCID,Gołębiewska Joanna34ORCID,Mackiewicz Jerzy5,Wałek Paweł26ORCID,Bociek Agnieszka2,Biskup Michał1,Odrobina Dominik27,Jaroszyński Andrzej2

Affiliation:

1. Ophthalmology Clinic, Voivodeship Regional Hospital, 25-736 Kielce, Poland

2. Collegium Medicum, Jan Kochanowski University, 25-317 Kielce, Poland

3. Department of Ophthalmology, Military Institute of Aviation Medicine, 01-755 Warsaw, Poland

4. Medical Faculty, Lazarski University, 02-662 Warsaw, Poland

5. Department of Vitreoretinal Surgery, Medical University of Lublin, 20-079 Lublin, Poland

6. 1st Clinic of Cardiology and Electrotherapy, Swietokrzyskie Cardiology Centre, 25-736 Kielce, Poland

7. Ophthalmology Clinic Boni Fratres Lodziensis, 93-357 Łódź, Poland

Abstract

Haemodialysis (HD) is currently the most commonly used method of renal replacement therapy. The process of dialysis involves numerous changes that affect many systems, including the eye. The changes occurring in the course of HD may affect the ocular parameters, such as intraocular pressure, central corneal thickness, retinal thickness, retinal nerve fibre layer thickness, and choroidal thickness (CT). The choroid, being one of the most vascularized tissues, is characterized by the highest ratio of blood flow to tissue volume in the entire body, may be particularly susceptible to changes occurring during HD, and at the same time reflect the microcirculatory status and its response to HD. Patients with end-stage renal disease subjected to dialysis are highly susceptible to systemic microvascular dysfunction. Moreover, it is considered that the process of HD itself contributes to vascular dysfunction. Nowadays, thanks to the development of imaging techniques, the widely available optical coherence tomography (OCT) tests allow for the assessment of CT, while OCT-angiography allows for a quick, non-invasive, and repeatable assessment of the condition of retinal and choroidal microcirculation, which significantly expands our knowledge regarding the reaction of ocular microcirculation due to HD. The assessment of both retinal and choroidal circulation is even more attractive because retinal circulation is autoregulated, while choroidal circulation is mainly controlled by extrinsic autonomic innervation. Thus, assessment of the choroidal response to an HD session may provide the possibility to indirectly evaluate the functions of the autonomic system in patients subjected to HD. At a time when the importance of microcirculation in systemic and renal diseases is becoming increasingly evident, the assessment of ocular microcirculation appears to be a potential biomarker for assessing the condition of systemic microcirculation. In this work, we present a review of the literature on the effect of the HD session on CT and the retinal and choroidal microcirculation.

Funder

Jan Kochanowski University

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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