Northwestern Medical Journal (Oct 2024)
Evaluation of retinal nerve fiber layer and choroidal structure in obese children and adolescents
Abstract
Aim: Obesity-related vascular damage and endothelial dysfunction have deleterious effects on the ocular vasculature. It was aimed to examine optical coherence tomography (OCT) parameters in obese and overweight children and to define their relationship with metabolic markers in this study. Methods: The patient group consisted of 26 obese, 24 overweight patients aged between 8 and 18 years. The control group consisted of 25 healthy children with normal body mass index (BMI). This was a cross-sectional observational study. Serum glucose, lipid parameters, and homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) were investigated. Measurement of choroidal thickness was performed with Cirrus HD-OCT (Carl Zeiss Meditec Inc., Dublin, CA, USA). Retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness was determined by an automatic computer algorithm without the need for user measurement. Results: There were no differences in subfoveal, nasal, temporal choroidal thickness, and RNFL between obese, overweight, and control groups (p>0.05). A positive (linear) moderate relationship was found between RNFL and the HOMA-IR of 26 patients in the obese group (r=0.389) (p=0.049). A positively weak correlation was found between height and RNFL in obese patient group (r=0.264, p=0.028). Conclusion: In the study, RNFL thickness increased as HOMA-IR level increased in obese children and adolescents. RNFL decreased as the height increased in obese children and adolescents. We believe that more comprehensive data about the effect of obesity on RNFL and choroidal thickness will be obtained with prospective studies in which the obese patient group with insulin resistance is taken separately and disease durations are defined, and long-term patient follow-up is performed.
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