Macular Ganglion Cell Inner Plexiform Layer Thinning in Patients with Visual Field Defect that Respects the Vertical Meridian

Background: To compare the thinning patterns of the ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer (GCIPL) and peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRNFL) as measured using Cirrus high-definition optical coherence tomography (HD-OCT) in patients with visual field (VF) defects that respect the vertical meridian. Methods: Twenty eyes of eleven patients with VF defects that respect the vertical meridian were enrolled retrospectively. The thicknesses of the macular GCIPL and pRNFL were measured using Cirrus HD-OCT. The 5% and 1% thinning area index (TAI) was calculated as the proportion of abnormally thin sectors at the 5% and 1% probability level within the area corresponding to the affected VF. The 5% and 1% TAI were compared between the GCIPL and pRNFL measurements. Results: The color-coded GCIPL deviation map showed a characteristic vertical thinning pattern of the GCIPL, which is also seen in the VF of patients with brain lesions. The 5% and 1% TAI were significantly higher in the GCIPL measurements than in the pRNFL measurements (all P < 0.01). Conclusions: Macular GCIPL analysis clearly visualized a characteristic topographic pattern of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) loss in patients with VF defects that respect the vertical meridian, unlike pRNFL measurements. Macular GCIPL measurements provide more valuable information than pRNFL measurements for detecting the loss of RGCs in patients with retrograde degeneration of the optic nerve fibers.




References:
[1] Jindahra P, Petrie A, Plant GT (2012) The time course of retrograde
trans-synaptic degeneration following occipital lobe damage in humans.
Brain 135: 534-541.
[2] Jindahra P, Petrie A, Plant GT (2009) Retrograde trans-synaptic retinal
ganglion cell loss identified by optical coherence tomography. Brain 132:
628-634.
[3] Bridge H, Jindahra P, Barbur J, Plant GT (2011) Imaging reveals optic
tract degeneration in hemianopia. Investigative ophthalmology & visual
science 52: 382-388.
[4] Cowey A, Alexander I, Stoerig P (2011) Transneuronal retrograde
degeneration of retinal ganglion cells and optic tract in hemianopic
monkeys and humans. Brain 134: 2149-2157.
[5] Park HY, Park YG, Cho AH, Park CK (2013) Transneuronal Retrograde
Degeneration of the Retinal Ganglion Cells in Patients with Cerebral
Infarction. Ophthalmology 120: 1292-1299.
[6] Tatsumi Y, Kanamori A, Kusuhara A, Nakanishi Y, Kusuhara S,
Nakamura M (2005) Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness in optic tract
syndrome. Japanese journal of ophthalmology 49: 294-296.
[7] Kanamori A, Nakamura M, Yamada Y, Negi A (2013) Spectral-domain
optical coherence tomography detects optic atrophy due to optic tract
syndrome. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 251: 591-595.
[8] Yamashita T, Miki A, Iguchi Y, Kimura K, Maeda F, Kiryu J (2012)
Reduced retinal ganglion cell complex thickness in patients with
posterior cerebral artery infarction detected using spectral-domain
optical coherence tomography. Japanese journal of ophthalmology 56:
502-510.
[9] Zhang X, Kedar S, Lynn MJ, Newman NJ, Biousse V (2006)
Homonymous hemianopias: clinical-anatomic correlations in 904 cases.
Neurology 66: 906-910.
[10] Newman SA, Miller NR (1983) Optic tract syndrome. Neuroophthalmologic
considerations. Arch Ophthalmol 101: 1241-1250.
[11] Gilhotra JS (2002) Homonymous Visual Field Defects and Stroke in an
Older Population. Stroke 33: 2417-2420.
[12] Mwanza JC, Oakley JD, Budenz DL, Chang RT, Knight OJ, Feuer WJ
(2011) Macular ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer: automated detection
and thickness reproducibility with spectral domain-optical coherence
tomography in glaucoma. Investigative ophthalmology & visual science
52: 8323-8329.
[13] Mwanza JC, Durbin MK, Budenz DL, Girkin CA, Leung CK, Liebmann
JM, Peace JH, Werner JS, Wollstein G (2011) Profile and predictors of
normal ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer thickness measured with
frequency-domain optical coherence tomography. Investigative
ophthalmology & visual science 52: 7872-7879.
[14] Curcio CA, Allen KA (1990) Topography of ganglion cells in human
retina. The Journal of comparative neurology 300: 5-25.