PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

The assessment of acute chorioretinal changes due to intensive physical exercise in young adults.

  • Irén Szalai,
  • Anita Csorba,
  • Fanni Pálya,
  • Tian Jing,
  • Endre Horváth,
  • Edit Bosnyák,
  • István Györe,
  • Zoltán Zsolt Nagy,
  • Delia Cabrera DeBuc,
  • Miklós Tóth,
  • Gábor Márk Somfai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268770
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. e0268770

Abstract

Read online

PurposeThere is abundant evidence on the benefits of physical activity on cardiovascular health. However, there are only few data on the acute effects of physical exercise on the retina and choroid. Our aim was the in vivo examination of chorioretinal alterations following short intense physical activity by spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT).MethodsTwenty-one eyes of 21 healthy, young subjects (mean age 22.5 ± 4.1 years, 15 males and 6 females) were recruited. Macular scanning with a SD-OCT was performed before and following a vita maxima-type physical strain exercise on a rowing ergometer until complete fatigue. Follow-up OCT scans were performed 1, 5, 15, 30 and 60 minutes following the exercise. The OCT images were exported and analyzed using our custom-built OCTRIMA 3D software and the thickness of 7 retinal layers was calculated, along with semi-automated measurement of the choroidal thickness. One-way ANOVA analysis was performed followed by Dunnett post hoc test for the thickness change compared to baseline and the correlation between performance and thickness change has also been calculated. The level of significance was set at 0.001.ResultsWe observed a significant thinning of the total retina 1 minute post-exercise (-7.3 ± 0.6 μm, p ConclusionsOur study implies that in young adults, intense physical exercise has an acute effect on the granular layers of the retina, resulting in thinning followed by rebound thickening before normalization. We could not identify any clear correlation with either choroidal changes or performance that might explain our observations, and hence the exact mechanism warrants further clarification. We believe that a combination of vascular and mechanic changes is behind the observed trends.