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Ocular Blood Flow Measurements in Healthy White Subjects Using Laser Speckle Flowgraphy

To assess the feasibility and reliability of Laser Speckle Flowgraphy (LSFG) to measure ocular perfusion in a sample of healthy white subjects and to elucidate the age-dependence of the parameters obtained. This cross-sectional study included 80 eyes of 80 healthy, non-smoking white subjects of West...

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Published in:PloS one 2016-12, Vol.11 (12), p.e0168190-e0168190
Main Authors: Luft, Nikolaus, Wozniak, Piotr A, Aschinger, Gerold C, Fondi, Klemens, Bata, Ahmed M, Werkmeister, René M, Schmidl, Doreen, Witkowska, Katarzyna J, Bolz, Matthias, Garhöfer, Gerhard, Schmetterer, Leopold
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Language:English
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Summary:To assess the feasibility and reliability of Laser Speckle Flowgraphy (LSFG) to measure ocular perfusion in a sample of healthy white subjects and to elucidate the age-dependence of the parameters obtained. This cross-sectional study included 80 eyes of 80 healthy, non-smoking white subjects of Western European descent between 19 and 79 years of age. A commercial LSFG instrument was applied to measure ocular blood flow at the optic nerve head (ONH) three successive times before and after pharmacological pupil dilation. The mean blur rate (MBR), a measure of relative blood flow velocity, was obtained for different regions of the ONH. Eight parameters of ocular perfusion derived from the pulse-waveform analysis of MBR including blowout time (BOT) and falling rate (FR) were also recorded. Artifact-free LSFG images meeting the quality criteria for automated image analysis were obtainable in 93.8% without pupil dilation and in 98.8% with pharmacological pupil dilation. Measurements of MBR showed excellent repeatability with intraclass correlation coefficients ≥ 0.937 and were barely affected by pupil dilation. The majority of pulse-waveform derived variables exhibited equally high repeatability. MBR-related blood flow indices exhibited significant age dependence (p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0168190