PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Morphological changes in amblyopic eyes in choriocapillaris and Sattler's layer in comparison to healthy eyes, and in retinal nerve fiber layer in comparison to fellow eyes through quantification of mean reflectivity: A pilot study.

  • Oussama Samer Masri,
  • Bachir Abiad,
  • Mouhamad J Darwich,
  • Paulette Antonios Sarkis,
  • Georges M El Mollayess,
  • Zeina Nasser,
  • Youssef Fares,
  • Elie Al Ahmar,
  • Elias Estephan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255735
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 8
p. e0255735

Abstract

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PurposeEstablishing the reliability of a new method to check the mean retinal and choroidal reflectivity and using it to find retinal and choroid changes in amblyopia.MethodsDesign: Retrospective case-control. Population: 28 subjects of which 10 were healthy controls (20 eyes): 8 with refractive errors, 1 with strabismus, and 1 with both. 18 patients with unilateral amblyopia included: 7 anisometropic, 6 isoametropic, 1 strabismic, and 4 combined. Mean participants' age: 13.77 years ± 10.28. Observation procedures: SD-OCT and ImageJ. Main outcome measure: mean reflectivity of retinal and choroid layers. Amblyopic, fellow, and healthy eyes were compared.ResultsThe method of measuring reflectivity is good to excellent reliability for all regions of interest except the fourth. The mean reflectivity of the choriocapillaris and Sattler's layer in amblyopic eyes were significantly lower than in healthy eyes (p = 0.003 and p = 0.008 respectively). The RNFL reflectivity was lower than that of fellow eyes (p = 0.025). Post-hoc pairwise comparisons showed statistically significant differences between amblyopic and healthy eyes for choriocapillaris (p = 0.018) and Sattler's (p = 0.035), and between amblyopic and fellow eyes for RNFL (p = 0.039).ConclusionA decrease in reflectivity of the choriocapillaris and Sattler's in amblyopic compared to healthy eyes, and a decrease in reflectivity of the RNFL in the amblyopic compared to fellow eyes, indicate that the pathophysiology is partly peripheral and might be bilateral.