Br J Ophthalmol 1998;82:655-658 ( June )
Accuracy of visible retinal emboli for the detection of
cardioembolic lesions requiring anticoagulation or cardiac surgery
Sanjay Sharma,a
Gary C Brown,b
Alan F Cruessa, for the
Retinal Emboli of Cardiac Origin study group
a Coordinating Centre, Queen's University, Kingston
Ontario, b Wills Eye Hospital
Correspondence to: Sanjay
Sharma, MD, RECO, Room 3011, Etherington Hall, Queen's University,
Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6.
Accepted for publication 20 January 1998
AIM
To determine the accuracy of visible retinal
emboli as a diagnostic "test" for the likelihood of receiving
anticoagulation or cardiac surgery based on the results of
transthoracic echocardiography, in the setting of acute retinal
arterial occlusion.
METHODS
A multicentre retrospective diagnostic
study at Kingston Eye Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario;
Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia; Ottawa Eye Institute, Ottawa,
Ontario; and the Halifax Infirmary, Halifax, Nova Scotia of 104 patients with both embolic and non-embolic acute retinal arterial
obstruction who underwent transthoracic echocardiography was performed,
to determine the accuracy of visible retinal emboli as a diagnostic
"test" for anticoagulation or cardiac surgery. Anticoagulation or
surgical intervention on the basis of abnormalities was detected solely through the technology of transthoracic echocardiography.
RESULTS
41 patients had visible retinal emboli
(calcific, cholesterol, or fibrin). The remaining 63 had no evidence of
embolic disease. The sensitivity of emboli for the likelihood of a
patient receiving anticoagulation or cardiac surgery was 50%. The
specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value
were 62%, 15%, and 90%, respectively. The likelihood ratio (LR=1.31)
obtained given the presence of a visible retinal embolus was neither
clinically nor statistically significant (LR+ve = 1.31; 95% CI (0.91, 3.16)). This likelihood ratio, when applied to a patient with a pretest probability of 50%, results in a post-test probability of 56.7%.
CONCLUSIONS
These results demonstrate that the
presence of a visible retinal embolus should not be the sole
determinant of whether to order transthoracic echocardiography, as the
likelihood ratio for a patient receiving anticoagulation or cardiac
surgery, given the presence of a visible retinal embolus was only
1.31.
Keywords:
retinal emboli;
cardioembolic lesions;
anticoagulation;
cardiac surgery
© 1998 by British Journal of Ophthalmology