- When to consider referring for low-vision rehabilitation
- The role of sex hormones and aging in dry eye disease
- 3 reasons to read AOA’s newest clinical practice guideline
- Identifying reading difficulties in children
- Mobilizing against myopia
- New AOA clinical guideline puts focus on elevating care of glaucoma patients
- Tips for reinforcing optometry’s role in the broader health care system
- Vision loss makes list of 14 risk factors for dementia
- The ‘gatekeepers of primary eye care’
- Myopia report calls for disease classification, new federal policies
- High-tech solutions for low vision
- Optometrists play an integral role in assessing and treating patients with traumatic brain injuries.
- Primary care of the stroke patient
- Research on eye aberrations not abstract to award-winning scientists
- AOA, CooperVision mobilize to ‘disrupt the status quo,’ advance new standard of care for children with myopia
- What do the experts say on genetic testing for IRDs?
- Pediatric keratoconus prevalence higher than believed, may change care approach
- Making blurry vision clear
- Unblurring the lines
- Appreciating optometry’s value to patients with diabetes and their primary care physicians
- 9 benefits of introducing laser procedures into your practice
- 5 considerations if you’re thinking about adding laser procedures to your practice
- Optometrist-performed YAG capsulotomies shown effective, safe and beneficial for patients
- Proof not positive yet on low-dose atropine for myopia in children
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- Legal blindness in America
- AOA webinar addresses concerns about myopia management
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- Marijuana sensibilities changing fast: Are you ready for patients’ questions?
- Buzz builds for AOA virtual ePosters event
- New AOA adult eye guideline
- New technology for the advanced AMD patient
- Interprofessional communication for diabetic eye care
- Contact lens experts weigh in on gaps in consumer knowledge
- Align your team on binocular vision disorders
- How to better manage dry eye disease
- eyes the brain and learning
- Can vision intervention slow onset of dementia
- New independent task force recommendation on glaucoma screening underwhelms
- Gene therapy vision rehabilitation for IRDs
- 2022 contact lens controversies
- The latest research from AOA members
- Caring for patients with special needs
- New discoveries aid understanding of the visual system
- Don’t let the pressure get to you or your patients
- How technology has changed recommendations for visually impaired children
- 12 ways to provide better care for patients with prediabetes and diabetes
- Alzheimers and eyes
- Level up your diabetes care with specialists, services collaboration
- Behind the lens
- Contact lens developments regarding keratoconus
- Managing the care of patients with contact lens-related dry eye
- Lens-based strategies to address reading issues due to mild, disease-related vision loss
- Study shines light on optogenetics in retinitis pigmentosa
- surgical procedures courses
- Genetic Testing and Gene Therapy
- low vision in your practice
- Low percentage of patients with diabetes adhere to key self-care practices
- EBO to produce new glaucoma clinical practice guideline
- details of visual functions immediately following marijuana use
- Understanding Photophobia in mTBI
- New myopia management guidance released
- The challenges of maintaining a healthy tear film
- Integrating models of diabetic eye care
- Dry Eye and Productivity
- Contact lens innovation delivers opportunity
- How face masks affect the eyes
- Marijuana dispensaries still blow smoke over glaucoma effects
- Conjunctival Lymphangiectasia and Fabry
- Techniques to enhance contrast
- Americans remain at high risk for vision loss
- Stimulating eye and vision research
- Allergic conjunctivitis in a COVID-19 world
- Atropine in myopia control
- sleep patients ocular health
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- Demystifying dizziness
- Optometry and Glaucoma patients
- 5 reasons why doctors should use AOA diabetes guideline
- Growing epidemic of adolescents and young adults with prediabetes
- Improving scanning efficiency of individuals with homonymous hemianopia
- second edition of diabetes clinical practice guideline
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- Study high school sports concussions underscores optometry role in care
- Prototype imager of tear film sublayers opens eyes on dry eye
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- Addressing elderly vision impairment
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- Study looks at what patients understand about their glaucoma diagnoses
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- Study links visual impairment to physical and cognitive function declines
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- New tool educates and motivates patients with diabetes related eye disease
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- Novel glaucoma therapy One ring to help them all
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- Gene mutation uncovers potential treatment for rare form of pediatric glaucoma
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- FDA approves first corneal cross linking system for treatment
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- Virtual model aids diabetic retinopathy progression understanding
- doctors of optometry AMD assessments comparable to ophthalmologistsoutcomes
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- Not a dry eye
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- Tears now fears Zika persists in eyes
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- advancing keratoconus care
- visual dysfunction after brain injury
- Study detects early biomarkers for risk of developing diabetic retinopathy
- Prevalence of Undiagnosed AMD
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- Zikababy
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- Clinical Pearls for Seasonal Allergies
- Doctors of optometry less likely to prescribe seldom needed antibiotics for conjunctivitis
- T cells hold promise of treatment for preemies born with eye condition
- Youth Concussions
- New imaging techniques detect earlystage Alzheimer’s disease
Analysis: Retinal measurements hold clues to Alzheimer’s disease
September 30, 2019
Mounting evidence confirms specific retinal measurements, taken by SD-OCT, are associated with Alzheimer’s disease or cognitive impairment.
Dozens of studies now confirm associations between abnormal retinal changes and cognitive conditions, such as Alzheimer's disease, illuminating the potential utility of common optometric imaging technology in neurological care.
Published in the journal Ophthalmology, a systematic review of available evidence identified 30 studies that examined the relationship between spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) measurements of the retinal structure with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The meta-analysis determined that a number of SD-OCT measurements were significantly thinner among AD patients as compared to control groups, suggesting these retinal biomarkers might be integrated with other clinical and imaging biomarkers for early AD detection.
Alzheimer's disease, an irreversible and progressive neurodegenerative disease, currently affects nearly 6 million Americans with no viable cure. Serious memory loss and reduced cognition are often the earliest signs of failing nerve cells, a time when early intervention may be able to slow disease development and help caregivers prepare.
However, pathologic changes begin well before onset of cognitive decline, and the slow, progressive nature of AD means patients aren't often diagnosed until late in the disease course when irreversible neurodegeneration and vascular damage already occur. That's why AD patients may only live four to eight years after diagnosis. Likewise, it's why emerging evidence of OCT's potential utility in risk assessment or even early detection proves so promising.
Per this recent meta-analysis, researchers scanned literature dating prior to 2018 and settled upon 30 eligible studies—all of which were cross-sectional studies—that involved 1,257 AD patients, 305 MCI patients and 1,460 controls. These studies specifically assessed the associations between AD, MCI and measurements of SD-OCT, including ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer (GC-IPL), ganglion cell complex (GCC), macular volume and choroidal thickness, as well as retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) and macular thickness.
The body of research found AD patients showed significantly thinner average GC-IPL thickness, macular GCC thickness and choroidal thickness; significantly smaller macular volume; significant thinning of the macular thickness in all inner and outer sections of the macula; and significant reduction in the mean RNFL thickness.
Additionally, researchers noted significant associations between the type of OCT model and the effect sizes of the macular thickness differences between AD patients and controls, precipitating a subgroup analysis according to the types of model. However, researchers still found reduction of macular thickness in AD patients remained statistically significant.
"Retinal ganglion cells, the cells responsible for consolidating visual information and transmitting them to the brain directly via the optic nerve, share similar properties with the cerebral neurons," authors write. "Fewer RGCs in AD is consistent with the hypothesis that the pathologic cascade of AD affects both the cerebral neuron and the RGCs in the retina, leading to loss of RGCs over time."
"In addition to thinner neuronal layers in the retina, we observed that the choroidal thickness measured by SD OCT also was significantly thinner in AD. Because cerebral vascular impairment is recognized as one of the earliest pathologic features in AD, similar pathophysiologic processes also may affect the choroidal layer, which is the vascular layer of the eye."
Despite the findings, researchers note all studies to date were cross-sectional with a lack of prospective studies and called for additional research to generate more certainty. Still, the promise of OCT in potentially identifying retinal biomarkers of AD proves enticing.
"In the future, SD-OCT may be used clinically as a risk indicator to stratify individuals with high risk of AD developing who then can benefit from further investigations, including amyloid positron emission tomography imaging and detailed neuropsychological assessments."
Taking the next steps
Early detection and monitoring of preclinical cognitive decline are goals that AD researchers continue to strive toward, and such evidence suggests that retinal microvasculature may provide that in vivo, non-invasive, neurological health proxy that could help clinicians make critical care decisions. For as much published research details these associations, the Alzheimer's Association is keen on continuing these investigations—and the AOA is taking a vested interest in these efforts.
In May, the AOA joined other leading researchers in a workshop sponsored by the Alzheimer's Association to lay the groundwork for a large-scale study of early detection and monitoring of MCI and AD through retinal/ocular imaging. Michael Duenas, O.D., AOA chief public health officer, was optometry's sole representative to the nine-member subcommittee that brought together over 90 researchers from nine different countries.
As Dr. Duenas explains, researchers are striving for detection and monitoring techniques with high sensitivity. With increasing AD prevalence and current diagnostic methods often inaccessible, invasive and cost-prohibitive (e.g., MRI, cerebral spinal fluid examination or PET), noninvasive and accessible OCT and OCT-A can become a mainstay toward early detection and the provision of evidence for effectiveness of potential treatment.
"Optometry is the most accessible eye care profession and that accessibility paired with technology and understanding of early cognitive decline is going to be essential in raising our patients' health outcomes and preventing or slowing neurodegenerative disease," Dr. Duenas says.