Keratoconus and normal-tension glaucoma: a study of the possible association with abnormal biomechanical properties as measured by corneal hysteresis (An AOS Thesis).
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Abstract
Purpose: To test the hypothesis that keratoconus and pellucid patients who have glaucoma or are suspected of having glaucoma have lower corneal hysteresis (CH) and/or corneal resistance factor (CRF) measurements compared to controls.
Methods: A prospective study at a tertiary eye center of keratoconus and pellucid patients with glaucoma or suspected of having glaucoma, and age-matched keratoconus and pellucid controls, was performed. After informed consent was obtained, corneal topography, ocular response analyzer measurements, pachymetry, intraocular pressure, A-scan measurements, Humphrey visual fields (VFs), and disc photos were done. Analyses compared cases to controls on primary (CH and CRF) and secondary variables. Disc photos and VFs were rated in a masked fashion.
Results: The mean CH (8.2, SD=1.6, vs 8.3, SD=1.5) and CRF (7.3, SD=2.0, vs 6.9, SD=2.1) were low and did not differ significantly between 20 study patients (29 eyes) and 40 control patients (61 eyes), respectively. CH had a negative, significant correlation with maximum corneal curvature by topography (P < .002) and positive, significant correlation with central corneal thickness (P < .003). The mean cup-disc ratio was larger among cases than controls (0.54, SD=0.20, vs 0.38, SD=0.20; P = .003). VFs were suggestive of glaucoma more often among the study eyes than controls (11 of 29, 37.9%, vs 8 of 60, 13.3%; P =.019).
Conclusions: CH was low in study and control patients and was correlated with severity of keratoconus/pellucid, but not with glaucoma/suspected glaucoma or control status. Evidence of glaucoma was more common in study eyes than controls, but was present in both.