| Literature DB >> 35262759 |
Carlijn D J M Borm1, Mario Werkmann2, Debbie de Graaf3, Femke Visser4, Arno Hofer2, Marina Peball2, Katarzyna Smilowska3, Diana Putz5, Klaus Seppi2, Werner Poewe2, Carel Hoyng6, Bastiaan R Bloem3, Thomas Theelen6, Nienke M de Vries3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ophthalmological disorders are common and frequently disabling for people with Parkinson's disease (PD). However, details on the prevalence, severity and impact of ophthalmological disorders thus far lacking. We aimed to identify PD patients with undetected ophthalmological disorders in a large cross-sectional, observational study.Entities:
Keywords: Non-motor symptoms; Ophthalmological disorders; Ophthalmology; Parkinson’s disease; Visual impairment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35262759 PMCID: PMC9217779 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-022-11014-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 6.682
Patients characteristics
| Demographicsa | PD patients ( |
|---|---|
| Age, median (IQR) [range], years | 68 (8) [60–68] |
| Men, | 69 (68) |
| Disease duration, median (IQR) [range], years | 6 (7) [0–19] |
| Hoehn and Yahr stage (SD) | 2 (0) [2–4] |
| Laterality (more affected body side), right: | 41 (41) |
| Schwab & England ADL scale (SD) | 84% (12) |
| Levodopa doses equivalent, median (IQR) [range], mg | 580 (605) [0–1950] |
| Polypharmacy, mean (SD), number of medications | 5 (3) |
| Education, College degree, | 28% (28) |
| Country of birth (European), | 101 (99) |
| Falls in the last month, | 25 (25) |
| Uses visual aid, | 99 (99) |
| Comorbidity | |
| Diabetes Mellitus type II, | 10 (10) |
| Hypertension, | 31 (30) |
| Cardiac arrest, | 9 (9) |
| Stroke, | 3 (3) |
| Rating scales | |
| MDS-UPDRS part III | 32 (13.7) |
| MDS-UPDRS total score | 54 (22) |
| Cognitive function assessment | |
| MoCA | 27.3 (2.7) |
| CLOX 1 | 14.2 (2.6) |
| GDS | 3.6 (2.8) |
| Questionnaires | |
| Visual function questionnaire-25 total score | 82% (12.9) |
| VIPD-Q total score, (range) | 13 (0–48) |
| NMSS (German version) ( | 40 (28) |
| NMSS (Dutch version) ( | 20 (5.3) |
| PDQ-39 | 23 (13.8) |
For MDS-UPDRS, GDS, VIPD-Q, NMSS, and PDQ-39, higher scores indicate worse functioning
For activities of daily living scale, VFQ-25, MoCA, and CLOX, lower scores indicate worse functioning
n number of participants, IQR interquartile range, PD Parkinson’s disease; Levodopa Equivalent dose (LED); activities of daily living scale according to the modified Schwab and England scale (score 0–100%), UPDRS MDS unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale (total score 0–236), UPDRS part III (score 0–132), MoCA Montreal Cognitive Assessment (score 0–30); CLOX clock drawing test (score 0–16); GDS geriatric depression scale (score 0–30); VFQ-25 visual function questionnaire-25 (score 0–100%); VIPD-Q Visual impairment in Parkinson’s disease questionnaire (score 0–51); NMSS non-motor symptoms scale (score 0–360), Dutch version (score 0–30); PDQ-39 the Parkinson’s disease questionnaire-39 (score 0–100)
aData shown as mean (SD) unless otherwise indicated
Ophthalmological assessment: outcomes
| Outcome | Ophthalmological Assessment a | PD patients ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective ophthalmological assessment | OD mean (SD) | OS mean (SD) | |
| Best corrected visual acuity | LogMAR value | 0.06 (0.21) | 0.03 (0.16) |
| Snellen 20/25–20/10 (normal), % | 81% | 82% | |
| Snellen 20/32–20/63% | 12% | 11% | |
| Snellen 20/80–20/160, % | 1% | 2% | |
| Snellen worse than 20/200, % | 1% | 0% | |
| Visual acuity too low to drive (> 0.3 LogMAR) | 5% | 5% | |
| Reading | Reading speed, wpm, M:5 | 165 (49) | |
| Reading speed, wpm, M:0.25 (n = 12) | 73 (32) | ||
| Near visual acuity (LogMAR value) | 0.14 (.-0.20-0.50) | ||
| Snellen 20/25–20/10 (normal), % | 60% | ||
| Snellen 20/32–20/63,% | 39% | ||
| Snellen 20/80–20/160, % | 1% | ||
| Visual field | Humphrey field analyzer, MD (n = 30) | − 4.35 (4.6) | − 4.7 (5.5) |
| Octopus, MD (n = 71) | 5.3 (4.6) | 6.1 (4.8) | |
| Metamorphopsia | 13% | 18% | |
| Amsler grid (cannot see all corners/sides) | 7% | 8% | |
| Visual field deficit (moderate/severe) | 43% | 50% | |
| Contrast vision | Low-contrast letter charts (Pelli-Robson), CSS | 1.53 (0.20) | 1.52 (0.20) |
| Moderate/severe decreased (CSS < 1.50) | 40% | 50% | |
| Colour vision | Ishihara plates (range) | 18 (1–21) | 18 (1–21) |
| Farnsworth Munsell hue test (desaturated 15D) | |||
| Mild green blind | 2% | 6% | |
| Moderate/severe green blind | 3% | 3% | |
| Mild blue blind | 48% | 47% | |
| Moderate/severe blue blind | 24% | 26% | |
| Mild red blind | 2% | 4% | |
| Moderate/severe red blind | 5% | 6% | |
| Convergence | Near point of convergence, cm | 10.97 (0.28) | |
OD oculus dextra, OS oculus sinistra
BCVA best corrected visual acuity, in LogMAR. Normal value ≤ 0.10 LogMAR, or ≥ 20/25 Snellen visual acuity. Reading is assessed with the Radner reading chart. Wpm words per minute. Visual field is tested with the Humphrey and Octopus Automated Field Analyser in a standardised design. The mean deviation (MD) is notated. Lower MD score indicates for the Humphrey worse visual field deficit, normal value MD > 0. Higher MD score indicates for the Octopus worse visual field deficit, normal value MD ≤ -0.8
Pelli–Robson assessment consists of letters arranged in groups with varying contrast, from high to low, calculated in the CSS: contrast sensitivity score, (score 0–2.25)
To evaluate colour vision pseudo-isochromatic plates with coloured dots forming numbers (Ishihara plates) are used. Farnsworth desaturated 15D hue test is performed to evaluate subtler colour vision deficiencies. This task consists of ordering 15 coloured caps over trays in an incremental manner according to their hue
NPC near point of convergence in centimetre (cm)
To detect cataract the lens opacity is rated with the LOCSIII, Lens opacities classification system; NO nuclear opalescence (score 1–6), NC nuclear colour (score 1–6), Cortical (score 1–5), Posterior (score 1–5). Scores noted in table represent clinically relevant cataract
Cornea, eyelids and cornea are inspected. µm micrometre; IOP intra-ophthalmological pressure measured with applanation tonometry. Tear film quality is approached by the Tear-Film-Break-Up-Time (TFBUT), while the quantity of tears is measured by the Schirmer test. Schirmer II test, paper strips are inserted into the lower fornix with local anaesthesia, wet distance is measured in millimetres (mm), EBR eye blink rate is measured in blinks/minute
For NPC, LOCsIII and IOP higher scores indicate worse outcome
For visual acuity, CSS, Schirmer II, TFBUT and number of Ishihara plates lower scores indicate worse outcome
aData shown as mean (SD) unless otherwise indicated
Fig. 1Flowchart of the number of patients with PD and ophthalmological diseases. N = number of PD patients
Prevalence of ophthalmological disorders
| PD patients, age 60–86, | OD (%) | OS (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Ocular surface | ||
| Cornea disease a | 6 | 6 |
| Blepharitis | 2 | 2 |
| Dermatochalasis | 13 | 14 |
| Conjunctivitis sicca (mild-severe) | 86 | 86 |
| Conjunctivitis sicca (moderate/severe) | 27 | 27 |
| Conjunctivitis | 4 | 5 |
| Oculomotor | ||
| Experiencing diplopia* | 30 | |
| Convergence insufficiency | 41 | 41 |
| Ocular misalignment | 54 | 50 |
| Manifest | 5 | 6 |
| Intra-ocular | ||
| Cataractb | 17 | 18 |
| Lens capsule opacification | 3 | 2 |
| Pseudophakia | 20 | 19 |
| Vitreous haemorrhage | 0 | 3 |
| Retina/optic nerve | ||
| Maculopathy c | 27 | 22 |
| AMD dry | 24 | 20 |
| AMD wet | 0 | 0 |
| Diabetic macular oedema | 0 | 0 |
| Optic nerve disorder d ( | 50 | 52 |
| Glaucoma suspect e | 20 | 15 |
| Elevated IOP | 1 | 1 |
| Retinopathy f | 2 | 1 |
| Retinal vascular changes | 23 | 28 |
| Peripheral drusen | 10 | 9 |
| Additional | ||
| Nevus choroid | 7 | 3 |
| Tilted disc | 7 | 4 |
| Congenital colour blindness g | 5 | |
| Visual Hallucinations | 18 | |
| Amblyopia | 3 |
OD oculus dextra, OS oculus sinistra
*Based on the VIPD-Q questionnaire. Not specifically during reading
aGroup of cornea diseases, consists of: cornea scar, verticillate, dystrophy (punctate/erosions are part of the diagnosis of dry eyes),
bCataract clinically significant, total percentage OD with cataract (present of historic):40%, OS: 39%
cGroup of macular diseases, consists of: AMD (age-related macular degeneration), scar, epiretinal gliosis, telangiectasia, macular oedema,
dGroup of optic nerve disorders consists of: optic nerve head drusen, optic nerve head atrophy, optic nerve head pallor
eGlaucoma suspects, CDR (cup-to-disc-ratio) > 0.5 and a typical visual field deficit, IOP intra-ophthalmological-pressure
fGroup of retinopathies consists of: branch retinal vein occlusion, blot bleeding,
gIn the study, population congenital colour blindness occurred in 7% of the men and 0% woman
Visual function questionnaire-25 scores
| VFQ Sub-Scale | PD patients |
|---|---|
| (Mean ± SD) | |
| Composite score ** | 82 ± 13 |
| Role difficulties | 68 ± 28 |
| General vision | 77 ± 21 |
| Ocular pain | 78 ± 17 |
| Driving* | 78 ± 18 |
| Vision specific mental health | 81 ± 20 |
| Near activities | 82 ± 17 |
| Distance activities | 82 ± 17 |
| Peripheral vision | 88 ± 17 |
| Vision specific social functioning | 90 ± 14 |
| Vision specific dependency | 91 ± 20 |
| Colour vision | 94 ± 11 |
| General health | 68 ± 16 |
Subscale ordered highest to lowest impact
NEI VFQ-25 25-item National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire 10 (maximum score, 100), SD = standard deviation
*39 subjects do not drive and were excluded from the driving subscale
**Composite score without driving
Fig. 2Impact of ophthalmological diseases. A Impact of clinically relevant ophthalmological diseases (grade moderate to severe) on the visual functioning-25 questionnaire (VFQ-25). A total score of 100 on the VFQ-25 indicates perfect functioning in daily life, lower scores relate to impaired function due to ophthalmological symptoms. Shown here is a decrease in the VFQ-25 total score with an increase in ophthalmological diseases. B The impact of ophthalmological diseases on the frequency of falls in the last half year. Patients tend to fall more often with an increased number of clinically relevant ophthalmological diseases