| Literature DB >> 29988470 |
Huan Liao1,2, Zhuoting Zhu3, Ying Peng1,2.
Abstract
The ensuing upward shift in demographic distribution due to the increase in life expectancy has resulted in a rising prevalence of Alzheimer's disease (AD). The heavy public burden of AD, along with the urgent to prevent and treat the disease before the irreversible damage to the brain, calls for a sensitive and specific screening technology to identify high-risk individuals before cognitive symptoms arise. Even though current modalities, such as positron emission tomography (PET) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker, showed their potential clinical uses in early detection of AD, the high cost, narrow isotope availability of PET probes and invasive characteristics of CSF biomarker limited their broad utility. Therefore, additional tools for detection of AD are needed. As a projection of the central nervous system (CNS), the retina has been described as a "window to the brain" and a novel marker for AD. Low cost, easy accessibility and non-invasive features make retina tests suitable for large-scale population screening and investigations of preclinical AD. Furthermore, a number of novel approaches in retina imaging, such as optical coherence tomography (OCT), have been developed and made it possible to visualize changes in the retina at a very fine resolution. In this review, we outline the background for AD to accelerate the adoption of retina imaging for the diagnosis and management of AD in clinical practice. Then, we focus on recent findings on the application of retina imaging to investigate AD and provide suggestions for future research directions.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; early detection; novel biomarker; retinal imaging; review
Year: 2018 PMID: 29988470 PMCID: PMC6024140 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2018.00188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Summary description of potential retinal imaging techniques to study AD.
| Techniques | Summary | Main findings | High lights | Limitation/Future Direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ocular fundus | Color photograph of retinal surface. | (a) Qualitative: retinopathy, optic neuropathy; | (a) Widely used; | (a) Weak association; |
| Optical coherence tomography (OCT) | Near-infrared light penetrates retina; interferometry resolves tissue layers. | (a) RNFL thinning; | (a) Rapid; | (a) No visualization of single cell; |
| Confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (cSLO) | Confocal laser beam scans of retinal surface. | (a) Significant reduction in the RNFL; | (a) Non-invasive; | (a) Poor axial resolution; |
| Detection of Apoptotic Retinal Cells (DARC) | Real-time visualization of apoptotic retinal cells. | Detection of increasing number of apoptotic RGCs in AD animal models. | (a) Non-invasive; | (a) Healthy dataset of apoptotic cells needs to be established; |
| Pattern electroretinogram (PERG) | Using pattern-reversal stimuli and capturing retinal ganglion cell activity. | (a) Reduction in the amplitude of ERG responses; | Potential early detection of AD. | (a) Quite cumbersome; |
| Retinal oximetry | Spectrophotometric fundus imaging to measure oxygen saturation in retinal blood vessels. | Increasing arteriolar and venular oxygen saturation in MCI and moderate AD patients. | (a) Quick; | (a) Pupil dilation is needed; |
| Doppler OCT | Visualization and quantification of blood flow | (a) Significant reduction in the blood flow rate of the retina; | (a) Rapid; | (a) No visualization of single cell; |
| Retinal microperimetry | Topographic correlation between fundus details and light sensitivity of macular function. | Retinal sensitivity correlated with brain neurodegeneration among type 2 diabetes patients. | (a) Non-invasive; | Microperimety normative database in aging healthy controls and type 2 diabetic subjects without cognitive impairment is needed. |
| Multiphoton microscopy | Near-infrared light emitted by fluorescent dyes of AO1-987 and CRANAD-2. | Detection of cerebral Aβ plaques in animal models. | (a) High specificity; | (a) Highly invasive; |
| Micron retinal imaging microscope | Visualization of fluorescence signals at high resolution and equipped with a 3-CCD camera, and specific set of filters suitable to detect curcumin fluorescence. | Dynamic pattern of plaque formation and clearance following immunotherapy. | (a) Real-time; | Humans studies are needed. |