Literature DB >> 18382335

Retinal vessel analysis reproducibility in assessing cardiovascular disease.

Aljoscha S Neubauer1, Matthias Lüdtke, Christos Haritoglou, Siegfried Priglinger, Anselm Kampik.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate the clinical accuracy and determine the reproducibility of static, semiautomated retinal vessel analysis to supplement established vascular risk factors.
METHODS: Manual blood pressure measurements and calibrated retinal photographs were obtained, after informed consent, on subjects without any eye disease aged >50 years. A total of 48 subjects without systemic hypertension or any other vascular disease and 54 subjects with confirmed hypertension were enrolled. Analysis was performed on retinal photographs taken by a retinal thickness analyzer (Talia Technology, Israel). The arteriovenous ratio (AVR) was calculated by a semiautomated vessel tracking VSL software (Talia Technology). Reproducibility was determined for software tracking, intra-, and intergrader selection as well as intra- and intervisit for 20 subjects. The effects of image quality degradation and decentration were investigated.
RESULTS: Validation showed an excellent agreement between semiautomated software and manual vessel measurements. In the 102 subjects analyzed, retinal AVR was only correlated with established systemic hypertension (p=0.01) and gender (p=0.01). There was no effect of age on AVR. Other risk factors such as diabetes, smoking, body mass index, and current blood pressure showed some trends on multifactorial analysis. When limiting the number of vessels selected, software tracking induced no variability. The mean standard deviation for AVR was 0.02 for intra- as well as intergrader and 0.01 for inter- and intravisit effects. Image decentration only increased variability and the algorithm was robust against reducing image resolution and noise. Improper image focus, however, caused incorrect measurements of AVR.
CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of AVR can be performed reproducibly on routine retina photographs. Retinal AVR appears to be a relatively independent risk factor to assess systemic cerebrovascular disease.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18382335     DOI: 10.1097/OPX.0b013e318169284c

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Optom Vis Sci        ISSN: 1040-5488            Impact factor:   1.973


  2 in total

Review 1.  Endothelial dysfunction in cardiovascular disease and Flammer syndrome-similarities and differences.

Authors:  Jens Barthelmes; Matthias P Nägele; Valeria Ludovici; Frank Ruschitzka; Isabella Sudano; Andreas J Flammer
Journal:  EPMA J       Date:  2017-06-06       Impact factor: 6.543

2.  Experimental Characterization and Correlation of Mayer Waves in Retinal Vessel Diameter and Arterial Blood Pressure.

Authors:  Steffen Rieger; Sascha Klee; Daniel Baumgarten
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2018-07-13       Impact factor: 4.566

  2 in total

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