Br J Ophthalmol 1999;83:1291-1295
( November )
Localised retinal nerve fibre layer defects in chronic
experimental high pressure glaucoma in rhesus monkeys
Jost B Jonasa, Sohan Singh Hayrehb
a Department of
Ophthalmology and Eye Hospital, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg in Erlangen, Schwabachanlage 6, 91054 Erlangen, Germany, b Departments
of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, College of Medicine, University
of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA
Correspondence to: Dr Jost Jonas, University Eye Hospital, Schwabachanlage 6, 91054 Erlangen, Germany
Accepted for publication 2 July 1999
AIM
To evaluate
prospectively in an experimental model of chronic high pressure
glaucoma whether the concept of a mainly diffuse pattern of optic nerve
damage holds true for high pressure glaucoma.
METHODS
The study
comprised nine eyes of nine rhesus monkeys (Macaca
mulatta) with a mean age of 17.7 (SD 3.1) years (range 13-23 years). Experimental glaucoma was produced by multiple applications of
argon laser to the trabecular meshwork. Applanation tonometry was
regularly performed and fundus photographs, which were taken serially,
were used for retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) assessment and
morphometric optic disc analysis. Six monkeys, in which arterial hypertension and atherosclerosis had additionally been induced several
years before elevation of intraocular pressure, did not show any sign
of diffuse loss or localised defects of the RNFL before initiation of glaucoma.
RESULTS
Compared with
the same eyes at baseline, localised RNFL defects had developed in
eight (89%) eyes. It included all three eyes (100%) of the monkeys
without arterial hypertension/arteriosclerosis, and five of the
six monkeys (83%) with arterial hypertension/arteriosclerosis. Four
eyes had multiple localised RNFL defects. In all eyes, diffuse RNFL
loss was additionally present.
CONCLUSIONS
Besides
diffuse loss of RNFL, localised RNFL defects were present in almost all
eyes of monkeys with chronic experimental high pressure glaucoma.
Challenging the concept that a mostly diffuse type of optic neuropathy
occurs in high pressure glaucoma, the results suggest that, in high
pressure glaucoma, at least a mixture of localised and diffuse pattern
of optic nerve damage prevails.
© 1999 by British Journal of Ophthalmology