Br J Ophthalmol 2001;85:184-188
( February )
Relation between macular morphology and visual function in
patients with choroidal neovascularisation of age related macular
degeneration
Nuala Dorisa, Patricia M Hartb, Usha Chakravarthyb, Julie McClelanda, Michael Stevensonc, Chris Hudsona, Jonathan Jacksonb
a School of Biomedical
Science, University of Ulster, b Ophthalmology and Vision
Science Queen's University of Belfast, c Health and Health
Care Research, Queen's University of Belfast
Correspondence to: Usha Chakravarthy, Ophthalmology and
Vision Science, Queen's University and Royal Victoria Hospital,
Belfast BT12 6BA, UK
u.chakravarthy{at}qub.ac.uk
Accepted for publication 18 July 2000
AIM
To examine the
relation between three measures of visual function (distance acuity,
near acuity, and contrast sensitivity) and specific fluorescein
angiographic characteristics of the macular lesion in patients with
subfoveal choroidal neovascularisation (CNV) due to age related macular
degeneration (AMD).
METHODS
Visual
evaluation and digital fundus fluorescein angiography were performed in
93 patients with subfoveal CNV. Standard morphometric techniques were
used on two frames from the angiographic series closest to 30 seconds
and 60 seconds respectively, to ascertain total lesion size (defined as
the entire area of abnormal fluorescence), the size of the classic
component, and the distance from the fovea to the closest point of
healthy retina. Correlations were sought using Pearson's correlation
coefficients. Stepwise regression was used to minimise multiple colinearity.
RESULTS
When the study
eye was the better eye of a patient's pair of eyes, the strongest
correlation was between the size of the classic component and contrast
sensitivity (r= 0.48, p <0.001) and was highly significant. When the study eye was the worse eye, significant correlations were observed between total lesion size and all three measures of visual function. The strongest correlation was observed between overall lesion size and contrast sensitivity
(r = 0.52, p <0.001).
CONCLUSIONS
This study
has shown that the status of the study eye (that is, better or worse
eye of a pair of eyes) influences the impact of macular pathology in
AMD on visual function. The distance of the fovea from healthy retina
was found to be an important factor in predicting visual function.
© 2001 by British Journal of Ophthalmology