1. Introduction
Glaucoma is an optic neuropathy with its hallmark being a characteristic loss of the ganglion cell axons which in turn leads to an excavation of the optic disc. Although optic disc cupping occurs in many other ocular diseases [1] the assessment of the optic nerve head with either optic disc photography or the newer modalities remains of utmost importance in the diagnosis and follow up of the glaucomatous process. The digital stereophotographs allow storage of optic disc photos for future comparison and offer qualitative assessment of the optic nerve head. The new imaging modalities can quantitatively and objectively analyze various parameters of the optic nerve head and the retinal nerve fiber layer in order to discriminate between glaucomatous and nonglaucomatous optic discs. They can also compare scans of the same patient overtime and detect any changes. As glaucoma is a progressive optic neuropathy patient’s assessment overtime is of paramount importance in order to tract changes and monitor the progression of the disease.
1.1. New modalities for the imaging and analysis of the optic disc and retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL)
1.1.1. Red-free photography of the optic disc and RNFL
Photography is not a new imaging technique [2,3]. However newer photographic methods allow stereographic assessment of the optic nerve head and more detailed visualization of the RNFL. Retinal nerve fiber layer is better visualized when the refractive media are clear and in pigmented fundi. Its defects can be broadly classified as localized and diffuse and the former are easier to identify.Red free photography of the RNFL is as accurate in distinguishing glaucomatous from nonglaucomatous patients as optical coherence tomography (OCT), scanning laser polarimetry (SLP) and confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscope (SCLO) [4,5]. Stereophotographs of the optic discs was proven to be as efficacious in detecting glaucoma as the objective analysis the optic nerve head with the new modalities [6,7].
The new imaging modalities on the optic disc and RNFL include the confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (CSLO), optical coherence tomography (OCT) and scanning laser polarimetry (SLP). The first two technologies can analyze both the optic nerve head and RNFL while SLP analyzes the thickness of the RNFL only.
1.1.2. Confocal Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscopy (CSLO, fig 1)
The CSLO technology is used by the Heidelberg Retinal Tomograph (HRT, Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany). It is based on the principle of two conjugated pinholes. Laser light (670nm) enters through one pinhole and focuses on a plane of the retina or the optic disc. The reflected light passes through the confocal pupil and allows reflected light only from that specific plane to enter the photodetector. The focused laser light scans across the optic nerve head (ONH) and RNFL along the x and y axes at planes of different depth acquiring a series of images. This series is reconstructed to produce a three dimensional image. Each series consists of 16 images per mm and for a 4 mm depth scan 64 images are captured. A fundamental part of the SCLO technology is the reference plane. It is defined as a plane parallel to the retina and lies 50 μm below the temporal part of the scleral ring of Elsching. In ONH analysis structures above the reference plane are read as neuroretinal ring and structures below are read as disc cup. SCLO has a transverse resolution of 10 μm and an axial resolution of 300 μm. The field of view of the image is 15°×15°.
The HRT can analyze both the RNFL thickness and optic nerve head. A fundamental part of the analysis is the identification of the boundaries of the optic disc. The operator can draw a line along the edge of the optic disc. As the retinal vessels and peripapillary atrophy can make the exact identification of the boundaries difficult the examiner can use the 3-dimensional image of the optic nerve head in order to draw the line.
The RNFL thickness is measured at the edge of the optic nerve head for 360° and follows a double hump appearance as the RNFL is thicker in the superotemporal and inferotemporal sectors. The optic disc parameters analyzed are: the disc area, cup area, rim area, cup volume, rim volume, linear cup/disc ratio, mean cup depth. Mean cup depth, maximum cup depth, cup shape measure, height variation contour, mean RNFL thickness and RNFL cross-sectional area. The Moorfields regression analysis provides an overall assessment of the field of view and classifies it as “normal”, “borderline” and “outside normal limits”.
2. Strengths and limitations [8]
The advantages of the new version of CSLO (HRT 3) is the large normative database which includes subjects European, African and Indian ancestry and can analyze both optic nerve head and RNF. Its limitation is that some optic nerve head measurements rely on a reference plane based on a hand drown contour line around the disc margins. The Glaucoma Probability Score does not need a reference plane. HRT measurements can be influenced by intraocular pressure fluctuations [9].
2.1. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT, fig 2)
Optical coherence tomography uses the principle of interferometry to construct high resolution cross-sectional images of the retina. An 800 nm laser light is split into two beams before entering the eye. The imaging beam consists of short pulses of light (the duration of each pulse is defined as the coherence length). One beam enters the eye and is reflected from the retina and the second beam is reflected from a reference mirror that moves back and forth along the Z axis. When the two reflected light beams constructively interfere they create a signal read by the interferometer. The time delay of the back scattered light from each layer of the retina differentiates the depth location of each layer (time-domain OCT). As a consequence in time domain OCT the instrument needs to perform two scans: a transverse scan across the eye (x axis) and a depth scan (z axis).The upgrade of time-domain OCT is the spectral-domain or Fourier-domain OCT (SD OCT/FD OCT). The SD OCT instead of the mechanical movement of the reference mirror analyzes with the aid of a mathematical equation (Fourier transform: FS(z) ∝ FT{AS(K} ) multiple wavelengths reflected from the retina. SD OCT obtains retina scans much faster (as the movement of the reference mirror along the z axis is omitted and only the scanning of the beam along the x axis is used) and with a better resolution (5-6 μm axial resolution, 10-15 μm transverse resolution) than the time-domain OCT. For the analysis of the optic nerve head the OCT runs six scans across the optic disc in a spoke-like pattern (fig 3). The measurements of the area between the scans are interpolated from the values across the scans. The edge of the optic nerve head is automatically defined as the end of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE)/choriocapillaris layer. A straight line is taken from one edge of the RPE to the other and a reference plane is set 150 μm above this line. Neuroretinal rim is defined as the area above the reference plane and cup the area below it.
3. Strengths and limitations [8]
OCT can analyze both the morphology of the optic disc and RNFL (fig 3,4). However automatic recognition of the edges of the optic disc as the end of the RPE layer can give incorrect measurements in patients with peripapillary atrophy. This is especially true for glaucoma patients who tend to have greater peripapillary atrophic areas that progress overtime. In this case what is incorrectly measured as optic disc area is the area of the optic nerve head plus the peripapillary atrophy. Furthermore as the information of the optic nerve head data between the scans are interpolated small defects of the neuroretinal rim may be missed.
3.1. Scanning Laser Polarimetry (SLP) (fig 5,6)
Scanning laser polarimetry is used in the GDx (GDX; Carl Zeis Meditec, Dublin, CA, USA). It is based on the principle of retardation. The RNFL has linear birefringence due to the parallel orientation of the microtubules in the axons of the RNFL. When polarized light travels through the RNFL the beam parallel to the RNFL slows down compared to the one that travels perpendicular to the fiber layer. This difference in the speed between the two beams is called retardation and is proportional to the RNFL thickness. The scanning laser beam used is 785nm.
Because the corneal also exhibits birefringence the GDx has a variable corneal compensator (VCC) in order to subtract the retardation from the cornea and the only retardation measured is that derived from the RNFL. The newer GDx machines have an enhanced corneal compensator that offers better reproducibility of the measurements and is more accurate in the diagnosis of glaucoma [10]. The transverse resolution of the GDx is 45 μm.
4. Strengths and limitations [7]
SLP can only measure data from RNFL. Areas of peripapillary atrophy give false information about the RNFL. A minority of the eyes examined show atypical retardation patterns (APRs) which are overcome by the GDx-ECC machines [11]. Atypical patterns are those which do not follow the normal histological distribution of the RNFL with the supero- and inferotemporal sectors being the thickest. APRs give falsely high RNFL measurements [12]. Newer SLP models are not compatible with the older ones. On the other hand RNFL analysis with SLP does not require a reference plane.
5. Sensitivity and specificity
Badala et al [4] compared the efficacy of stereoptic disc assessment and that of all three imaging modalities (OCT, GDx, HRT 3) in diagnosing glaucoma. The sensitivity at 95% specificity of the best performing parameter of each modality is: for the OCT (average RNFL thickness) 89%, for the GDx VCC (nerve fiber indicator) 78% and for the HRT 3 [Frederick S. Mikelberg (FSM) discriminant function] 70%. Optic disc stereophtographs are as accurate in detecting glaucoma as the other imaging modalities.
Retinal nerve fiber analysis with all the above modalities exhibit a characteristic double hump because the RNFL in thicker in the superotemporal and inferotemporal sectors compared to the nasal and temporal ones.
All of the above imaging modalities have been employed in the diagnosis and follow up of patients with various stages of glaucomatous optic neuropathy. Studies have shown that there is a discrepancy between the measurements of the optic disc parameters taken with OCT and HRT in glaucomatous eyes [13]. HRT II had higher values for disc and rim area while RTVue-100 OCT had higher values for cup area, cup-to-disc area ratio, and vertical and horizontal cup-to-disc ratio. Leite et al [14] compared three FD-OCT machines and reported that their performance in detecting glaucoma is similar. FD-OCT out-performed SD-OCT in detecting progression of the glaucomatous process [15] but they were comparable in detecting glaucomatous damage [16]. Lee et al [17] found that the best performing parameter for glaucoma detection of the GDx is the nerve fiber index and that for Cirrus OCT the inferior RNFL thickness. GDx was also more accurate in detecting glaucoma than the Cirrus OCT. Two recent studies [18,19] showed that the diagnostic accuracy for glaucoma of the HRT II is dependent on the disc size which is not the case for OCT and GDx.
The severity of the glaucomatous process also affects the accuracy of glaucoma diagnosis of the various imaging technologies. The more advanced the disease the more accurate the diagnosis of glaucomatous optic neuropathy [20,21]. OCT and SLP performed better than CSLO in discriminating between early glaucomatous eyes with or without visual field defects [22]. In eyes with early glaucoma the most accurate parameter is the inferior RNFL thickness which performs better than the most accurate parameter of the CSLO (vertical cup-to-disc ratio). In glaucoma suspect eyes the most accurate parameter for the OCT is the average RNFL thickness, for the SLP the nerve fiber indicator and for the CSLO the vertical cup-to-disc ratio. The first two parameters performed better than the vertical cup-to-disc ratio. Leung et al [23] confirmed that SD-OCT performed better than HRT in recognizing patients with glaucoma. RNFL thickness changes performed better than optic nerve head parameters as evaluated with CSLO. The nerve fiber index of the SLP was more accurate in diagnosing glaucoma than the rim volume parameter of the CSLO [24]. SLP was also superior in detecting glaucoma progression by analyzing RNFL thickness compared to CSLO analysis of the neuroretinal rim area [25].
6. Anatomy of the optic disc (fig 7)
The optic disc is the area in the posterior pole where the ganglion cell axons converge to exit the eye and travel towards the brain. Its margins are defined by a dense fibrous tissue, the Elsching’s ring. The disc area is covered by the neuroretinal rim which contains the retinal ganglion cells axons and the disc cup in the center. The ganglion cells axons leave the eye by piercing the thinned part of the sclera called the lamina cribrosa. The axons are arranged in bundles and exit the eye via the pores of the lamina cribrosa to form the optic nerves. The size and shape of the neuroretinal rim and cup depend on the total size of the optic disc and the number of the axons that travel through it.
The following morphological features of the optic disc should be taken into account when assessing an optic nerve head [26]:
6.1. Optic disc size
The size of the optic disc shows great variability between different populations [27]. The range of the mean disc area measured in mm2 for people of different ethnic backgrounds is: africans 1.84-2.50, whites 1.65-2.34, Indians 2.24-2.93, Asians 1.97-2.67 and latinos 1.95-2.56 [28].The size was shown to be independent of the age after the age of 10, the body height, gender and refractive errors between -5.00 and +5.00 D. In contrast the optic disc is smaller in high hypermetropes and larger in high myopes. Optic disc size abruptly increases for myopia above -8.00 diopters (D) and significantly decreases for hyperopia above +4.00 D [29] The optic disc area was found to have great variability between healthy individuals by many researchers [28,30,31]. For this reason the terms <<microdisc>> and <<macrodisc>> have been coined. Microdisc is a disc with a disc area two standard deviations less than the mean of the normal disc area and macrodisc is a disc with a disc area two standard deviations above the mean. The Blue Mountain Study [32] classified the discs as small (1.1 – 1.3), medium (1.4 – 1.7) and large (1.8 – 2.0) based on the vertical disc diameter measured in mm. The European Glaucoma Society classified the disc based on the disc area as small (<1.6mm2 ), medium (1,6-2.8 mm2 ) and large (>2.8 mm2 ). Patients with primary open angle (POAG) and pigmentary glaucoma have normal disc size. In non-glaucomatous pathologies, optic disc drusen, pseudopapilledema, nonarteretic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy and tilted disc [33] are associated with small disc sizes while morning glory syndrome and optic disc pits with large discs. Furthermore larger discs have more axons in absolute number but less axons per disc area [34]. Patients with pseudoexfoliation glaucoma tend to have smaller discs and those with normal tension glaucoma larger discs [35,36]. Glaucoma, however, may occur in conjunction with abnormal disc size as well as with other disc pathologies.
6.2. Optic disc shape [26]
The optic disc is elongated along the vertical axis with the vertical axis being 7-10% longer than the horizontal. The disc shape as expressed by the ratio of minimal to maximal diameter shows less variability between individuals than the disc area. The disc shape is independent from sex, age, right and left eye and body weight and height and does not show interindividual variability for a refractive error less than -8.00D. In POAG patients the disc shape is not associated with the visual field defects. However for in high myopes >-12D it is more elongated. Elongated optic discs were associated with increased corneal astigmatism. Overall disc shape bears little value in the diagnosis of glaucoma.
6.3. Neuroretinal rim shape and cup-to-disc ratio (C/D ratio)
It represents the quotient of the vertical cup diameter to the vertical overall disc diameter. In normal eyes the cup is horizontally elongated with the horizontal diameter being 8% longer than the vertical one. On the other hand the disc is vertically oval shaped. As a consequence the neuroretinal rim is thicker at superior and inferior poles. The mnemonic ISNT rule dictates that the neuroretinal rim is thicker in the inferior pole of the disc followed by the superior, the nasal and finally the temporal which is the thinnest. The C/D ratio also shows interindividual variability being higher in large discs and lower in smaller discs. Clinicians should bear in mind the opposite configuration of the cup and optic disc when assessing the disc for glaucomatous damage. They should also take into account that a high C/D ratio is not necessarily pathognomonic for glaucoma as it can occur in large diameter discs (fig 8,9). Conversely early glaucomatous damage can be overlooked in small discs with small cups.
In the early to moderate glaucoma the axons in the superotemporal and inferotemporal areas of the disc are affected usually first and this leads to an increase of the C/D vertical diameter faster than the horizontal causing an increased vertical C/D ratio with violation of the ISNT rule.
A large C/D ratio has been shown to be a risk factor for glaucoma progression [37], although Cioffi et al argued that it merely represents undetected damage [38].
6.4. Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer (RNFL)
The retinal nerve fiber layer is made up of the nonmyelinated axons of the retinal ganglion cells. They are more visible in the inferotemporal and superotemporal areas of the fundus and least visible in the horizontal nasal and temporal sectors. The visibility of the RNFL corresponds to the configuration of the neuroretinal rim which is thicker in the superior and inferior poles of the disc [26] giving a double hump configuration in the OCT RNFL analysis (fig 4). Defects in RNFL precede optic disc cupping in the corresponding sectors [39] as well as visual field defects with standard automated perimetry [40]. The most common sectors affected in glaucoma are the inferotemporal followed by the superotemporal [41]. This pattern of RNFL loss leads to the disappearance of the double hump configuration of the RNFL (fig 10,11). Nerve fiber defects are encountered in other optic nerve diseases such as optic disc drusen, toxoplasmic retinochoroidal scars, diabetic retinopathy and optic neuritis secondary to multiple sclerosis [26,42].
6.5. Point of exit of the large vessel trunk on the optic disc
Research has shown that the area on the optic disc most susceptible to glaucomatous damage is the area that is the furthest away from the main vessel trunk (fig 12) [43]. The exit of the main vessel trunk is usually displaced superonasally which makes the inferotemporal quadrant more susceptible to the glaucomatous damage. The disc arterioles follow the contour of the neuroretinal rim. As the rim recedes in the glaucomatous process the arterioles tend to become displaced towards the periphery of the optic disc. If the rim becomes extremely thin the vessels may be pushed to the far periphery of the disc just next to the Elsching’s ring and then they sharply angle on the retinal surface giving rise to the bayoneting sign (fig 13). The presence of a temporal cilioretinal artery has a protective role against the glaucomatous process [44]
6.6. Optic disc haemorrhages (fig 14)
Optic disc haemorrhages are an independent risk factor for glaucoma and ocular hypertensive patients with disc haemorrhages are six times more likely to develop glaucoma than those patients without haemorrhages [45]. The frequency of disc haemorrhages in glaucoma eyes ranged from 9-20% [46,47]. Their frequency is not statistically different in glaucoma eyes with high or normal IOP [46]. Their prevalence in non-glaucomatous eyes ranges from 0.2% - 1.03% [48-51]
6.7. Peripapillary Chorioretinal Atrophy (PPCA, fig 13)
Peripapillary atrophy consists of an outer alpha zone with irregular hyper- hypopigmentation and an inner beta zone with visible large choroidal vessels and sclera. Alpha zone is present in most normal eyes but beta zone is more common in glaucoma eyes and tends to enlarge in eyes with progressing normal tension glaucoma [52]. They both tend to increase in size with advancing glaucoma damage [53]. The frequency of the beta zone varies between 59.5% and 69% in glaucoma patients and 17.4% and 24% in healthy subjects [53,54]. Beta zone is also larger in glaucomatous eyes (1.21 ±1.92 mm 2) compared to healthy ones (0.32 ± 0.99 mm2 ) [54]. There is conflicting evidence as to whether the PPCA corresponds to areas of neuroretinal rim thinning. Uchida et al [55] reported that PPCA progression correlated to progressive disc damage and visual field defects. On the other hand See et al [56] showed that neuroretinal area decrease did not correlate with PPCA progression. The extent of PPCA positively correlated with the presence of optic disc haemorrhage in glaucoma eyes [57]. In this study beta zone was larger in the eyes with disc haemorrhage.
7. Glaucomatous versus non-glaucomatous damage
Optic disc cupping is not pathognomonic for the glaucomatous optic neuropathy only [58]. Other diseases such as arteritic ischemic optic neuropathy (AION), optic neuritis, optic disc pit, colobomas, tilted disc, traumatic optic neuropathy, methanol toxicity, compressive lesions of the anterior visual pathways [59], disc drusen, long standing papilledema [26]. However nonglaucomatous disc damage produces optic disc rim pallor while glaucomatous damage produces focal or diffuse obliteration of the neuroretinal rim [60]. Glaucoma damage tends to produce deeper cups than the nonglaucomatous type [61]. In this study open angle glaucoma eyes had larger and deeper cups and smaller neuretinal rims compared to eyes with nonarteritic and arteritic AION. Contrary to glaucoma PPCA does not increase in nonglaucomatous damage [62].
There is great variability among healthy subjects and people from different races in the morphology of the optic disc which makes the diagnosis of glaucoma very complicated. The clinician should take into consideration various aspects of the anatomy of the optic nerve head and the RNFL before deciding whether a patient has glaucoma or not
8. Congenital anomalies of the optic disc
8.1. Tilted disc
The tilted optic disc syndrome is caused by an oblique insertion of the optic nerves in the globe usually inferonasally. Its prevalence is around 0.5% and is commonly bilateral. It is associated with high myopia, astigmatism, visual field defects (usually superotemporal arcuate scotomas), small optic disc area, low best corrected visual acuity, peripapillary atrophy and choroidal neovascular membrane [63].
Tilted disc analysis with optical coherence tomography (OCT) showed decreased nerve fiber thickness of the superior, inferior and nasal sectors as well as on average, a thicker temporal sector and a more temporally positioned inferior and superior peak sectors (fig 15) [64]. Multifocal electroretinogram also revealed suboptimal macular function [65]
8.2. Optic disc pit (fig 16)
Optic disc pits can be congenital or acquired. The former are a rare anomaly with a prevalence of 1:11,000 [66] and are associated with serous detachment of the macula which affects the vision and it can be treated with vitrectomy and gas tamponade. The acquired type is seen more often in pathological myopia and open angle glaucoma [67,68]. Their overall prevalence in Blue Mountain Study is 0.19% [69]. The presence of optic disc pit in eyes with open angle glaucoma is a risk factor for progressive optic nerve head damage, advancing visual field defects and presence of disc haemorrhages. They more commonly seen in normal tension glaucoma than POAG and are associated with visual field defects close to fixation [70]
8.3. Morning glory syndrome (fig 17,18)
Morning glory syndrome is a rare developmental abnormality of the optic nerve. It is usually unilateral and can be complicated by serous retinal detachmant and choroidal neovascularization. The OCT analysis of the RNFL shows large optic discs, increased thickness of the RNFL and decreased macular thickness [71]. Morning glory syndrome is associated with systemic diseases such as frontonasal dysplasia, neurofibromatosis 2 and PHACE (Posterior fossa abnormalities and other structural brain abnormalities -
Hemangioma(s) of the cervical facial region - Arterial cerebrovascular anomalies, Cardiac defects, aortic coarctation and other aortic abnormalities - Eye anomalies) syndrome
8.4. Optic disc colobomas
This disc anomaly results from incomplete closure of the embryonic fissure and it is usually unilateral. Possible ophthalmic complications include serous macular detachment, optic disc excavation despite normal IOP and choroidal neovascularization. It is also associated with multiple syndromes such as Patau, Edwards and cat eye syndromes and
8.5. Optic disc drusen
Optic disc drusen are hyaline bodies in the optic disc substance. Their prevalence is 3.4 – 24 per 1,000 and areusually bilateral [73]. They are usually located most commonly nasally and are difficult to visualize in childhood as they are buried but become more obvious in adolescence. Ophthalmic complications include choroidal and disc neovascularization and visual field defects. Disc drusen when buried can pose a diagnostic dilemma with papilledema. Disc drusen can be detected by fundus autofluorescence, B scan ultrasonography, computed tomography and recently OCT. Optical coherence tomography scans through the optic nerve head can directly show the drusen. Lee et al [74] reported that the RNFL thickness with spectral domain OCT was increased in all sectors in patients with papilledema as opposed to optic disc drusen in which the RNFL was thicker in the temporal quadrants compared to normal subjects. This can be explained by either a mechanical displacement of the retinal fibers by the drusen which usually lie in the nasal sector towards the temporal sectors or by the compression and subsequent atrophy of the nasal retinal fibers. In longstanding papilledema the retinal fibers are damaged and the average RNFL thickness is reduced. Disc drusen appear hyporeflective on OCT scans [75].
8.6. Optic nerve hypoplasia
Optic nerve hypoplasia is a congenital disorder that can be uni- or bilateral, segmental or total and the visual acuity can be normal or reduced to no light perception. It can be associated with many syndromes with the most common being de Morsier syndrome.
Two studies [76,77] found that in patients with superior segmental optic hypoplasia is associated with generalized reduction of the RNFL thickness involving all the sectors and not only the superior one.
9. Acquired optic disc disorders
9.1. Papilledema
Papilledema is the bilateral disc swelling secondary to increased intracranial pressure. Although bilateral it may be asymmetrical. It can be caused by space occupying lesions in the cavity of the skull, idiopathic intracranial hypertension, obstruction of the ventricles, impaired cerebrospinal fluid adsorption by the arachnoid villi, severe systemic hypertension, cerebral venous thrombosis, diffuse cerebral oedema following trauma.
Differential diagnosis includes: malignant hypertension, bilateral optic neuritis with optic nerve head involvement (papillitis), bilateral anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, diabetic papillopathy, Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy, pseudopapilledema (optic disc drusen, hypermetropia), and toxic optic neuropathy.
Optical coherence tomography is helpful in diagnosing early papilledema. Vartin et al [78] found that the peripapillary total retinal thickness rather than the conventionally calculated RNFL thickness as measured with spectral domain OCT differentiated early papilledema from normal subjects. Peripapillary total retinal thickness as a diagnostic tool for subtle papilledema was also reported by Skau et al [79]. OCT is useful in the follow up of patients with papilledema. Rebolleda et al [80] followed up patients with papilledema for 12 months following presentation and found that RNFL thickness decreased with time and visual field defects improved. Kupersmith et al [81] investigated different causes of optic disc swelling [papilledema, non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NA-AION ) and optic neuritis] with OCT and scanning laser polarimetry (SLP). Retinal nerve fiber thickness by OCT was increased in papilledema and NA-AION compared to eyes suffering from optic neuritis. This is due to greater disc edema in eyes with papilledema and NA-AION. SLP showed increased RNFL thickness in papilledema and optic neuritis. The authors concluded that OCT reveals increased retinal thickness due to axonal swelling but SLP shows the true damage of the axons.
Two studies investigated the morphology of the retinal pigment epithelium/Bruch's membrane (RPE/BM) complex and concluded that papilledema causes an inward (towards the vitreous cavity) bowing of the PRE/BM complex as opposed to patients with AION and optic neuritis [82,83]. The authors speculate that the increased pressure in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) caused the forward bowing of the RPE/BM complex. In the other types of disc swelling (AION, optic neuritis) pathophysiologically there is no high pressure of the CSF.
9.2. Optic Neuritis (ON) (fig 19)
Optic neuritis is the inflammatory process of the optic nerve. Anatomically it can affect the optic nerve head (papillitis), only the posterior part of the nerve (retrobulbar neuritis) or both.
Differential diagnosis includes: anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, compressive lesions of the optic nerve, Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy, central retinal vein occlusion, infiltration of the optic nerve head (sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, syphilis, leukemia)
Optical coherence tomography has been used in the diagnosis and follow up of patients with isolated optic neuritis or optic neuritis in clinically diagnosed multiple sclerosis (MS). It was found that as expected the patients with previous history of ON had thinner RNFL than normal subjects [84,85]. OCT can also demonstrate structural damage more accurately than standard automated perimetry. Noval et al reported that OCT can detect subtle RNFL changes in the presence of normal visual fields [86]. Interestingly Pro et al described RNFL thickening in the acute phase of ON even in patients without disc swelling [87]. OCT has been used in the follow up of patients with ON over time. Costello et al reported that the RNFL loss is more profound between the third and sixth month after the episode of ON [88]. The earliest damage in the RNFL is evident 2 months after clinical presentation and the RNFL damage halts 7 months after the episode of ON [89,90]. In patients suffering from multiple sclerosis, eyes unaffected by ON demonstrate lower RNFL thickness compared to normal subjects [91-95]. OCT findings have also been linked to visual function. Average RNFL thickness of less than 75μm predicted persistent visual dysfunction (90) and for every 1 line of reduced contrast sensitivity the RNFL thickness decreased by 4μm (91).
Secondary progressive MS was associated with greater RNFL decrease in both affected and unaffected by ON eyes (90, 92). Decreased RNFL thickness was also inversely associated with disease severity (the lower the RNFL thickness the more serious the disease) (95-97). Retinal nerve fiber thickness on OCT could not predict the risk of MS (96). In one study comparing the structural damage after optic neuritis it was found that only the modalities that measure RNFL thickness (OCT, GDx) were affected compared to disease free participants but the analysis of the optic disc with the HRT 3 was not statistically different compared to normal control group (99).
9.3. Ischaemic optic neuropathy
Anatomically is classified as anterior and posterior and aetiologically as non-arteritic and arteritic. Predisposing factors for the non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (NA-AION) is hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, sleep apnea, cataract surgery, erectile dysfunction, small crowded optic disc and long standing papilledema, while arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (A-AION) is caused by giant cell arteritis. Posterior ischaemic optic neuropathy involves the retrolaminal part of the optic nerve. It can follow a heart or spine operation or be caused by giant cell arteritis or present as the posterior equivalent of non-arteritic AION. Differential diagnosis is as in optic neuritis.
Optical coherence tomography in the acute stages of AION shows diffuse thickening of the RNFL which turns into thinning as the disease becomes chronic (100,101) (fig. 20,21,22). Contreras et al (102) found that the superior RNFL quadrant was more affected and that for every 1μm of nerve fiber thickness loss there was 1 dB decrease of mean deviation in standard automated perimetry. OCT analysis of the RNFL showed RNFL thinning compared to healthy controls and the area of retinal axon loss correlated well with visual field defects (102-105). Macular thickness also correlated with visual field loss in eyes with NA-AION (106).
Research has shown that that AION and glaucoma affect the optic nerve differently. RNFL thickness in glaucoma and NA-AION eyes is not statistically different but it is markedly thinner compared to normal eyes (61,107). However when adjusting for mean deviation (MD) of visual fields RNFL was thicker in eyes with A-AION and NA-AION compared to open angle glaucoma eyes. For the same level of MD, open angle glaucoma eyes had larger cup area, smaller rim area, larger cup/disc ratio, larger cup volume, smaller rim volume, and greater cup depth. When comparing the two types of AION, the non-arteritic type had smaller cup area, a larger rim area, and a smaller cup/disc ratio (61). In order to explain the discrepancy in the morphology of the optic nerve damage between both types of AION and glaucoma the authors suggest that glaucoma affects laminar connective tissue more than the prelaminar structures (as opposed to AION) and this causes the development of larger and deeper cups in glaucoma. The loss of laminar connective tissue leads in turn to retrodisplacement and thinning of the lamina cribrosa which causes the larger cup size in glaucoma. Both glaucoma and AION cause retinal gagglion cell loss but AION does not affect the laminar tissues.
9.4. Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON)
LHON is a rare mitochondrial disorder that affects males and is associated with mutations of the maternal mitochondrial DNA. It presents with acute loss of vision between the ages 10 – 60 but most often in the age range 15-35. Early signs are optic disc hyperaemia and nerve fiber swelling. In the later stages optic atrophy dominates the clinical picture. Differential diagnosis is as in papilledema.
OCT demonstrated statistically significant increase of the RNFL thickness (mean, superior, inferior, nasal) in the early stage of the disease (6-8 weeks after initial presentation). Nine months after onset there is a decrease in RNFL thickness in all but nasal quadrants (108,109). Unaffected male carriers had higher RNFL thickness in the temporal and inferior quadrants which was more pronounced in those with the 11778 mutation. Unaffected female carriers had a RNFL thickness increase in the temporal quadrant more pronounced in those with the 11778 mutation (110). Patients with the 11778 mutation tend to have increased RNFL thickness in the early stages of the disease and decreased thickness in the later stages compared to those with the 14484 mutation (111).
9.5. Optic atrophy
Optic atrophy is classified aetiologically as:
Primary (not associated with previous optic disc swelling. Most common causes are compressive lesions of the optic pathways up to the lateral geniculate bodies, hereditary disorders and multiple sclerosis).
Secondary (following longstanding swelling of the optic nerve head (papilledema, AION, papillitis)
Consecutive (following retinal diseases with widespread destruction of the retina such as retinitis pigmentosa, central retinal artery occlusion, vasculitis)
The new devices for the analysis of RNFL have been employed for the differential diagnosis of those types of optic atrophy in which the features of glaucomatous versus non-glaucomatous optic nerve damage are not clear. Autosomal dominant optic atrophy (ADOA, Kjer’s optic neuropathy) is a rare hereditary disorder [it affects 1:35,000 people in the general population (112)] that can be misdiagnosed for normal tension glaucoma (113) and in this cases OCT provide useful information in order to reach the correct diagnosis. Several reports have shown that eyes with ADOA have reduced mean RNFL thickness and the quadrant most commonly affected being the temporal one (114-117). In contrast the glaucomatous process typically affects the inferior and superior sectors (118). There is also a reduction in macular thickness in patients with ADOA (119). Barboni et al (120) reported that the optic nerve heads in patients with ADOA have smaller size compared to normal controls.
Chiasmal compressive lesions produce a characteristic bitemporal hemianopia which is due to the preservation of the uncrossed fibers that originate from the temporal retina and enter the optic disc with the superior and inferior arcuate bands. The main damage therefore occurs in the nasal and temporal sectors of the disc and causes a characteristic ophthalmoscopic appearance named band atrophy. OCT has shown that not only the nasal and temporal sectors of the RNFL are affected but also the superior and inferior ones (121-123). OCT analysis of the optic nerve head could depict better than the Heidelberg Retina Tomograph the rim loss and subsequently the increased cup area in eyes with band atrophy (124).
The new imaging modalities of the optic nerve head and RNFL thickness can describe with high accuracy the morphology of the above structures. However none of them has 100% accuracy in the diagnosis of glaucoma. RNFL thickness analysis seems to perform better than optic disc analysis. Clinical examination is of utmost importance before reaching the diagnosis of glaucomatous optic neuropathy
Acknowledgments
The authors have no proprietary interest in any of the products mentioned in the manuscript
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