Litcius/Paper detail

Optical coherence tomography and angiography in Alzheimer's disease and other cognitive disorders

Mohamed Moussa, Yousra Falfoul, Amina Nasri, Khaled El Matri, Imen Kacem, Saloua Mrabet, A. Chebil, Alya Gharbi, Riadh Gouider, L. El Matri

2023European Journal of Ophthalmology13 citationsDOI

Abstract

AIMS: The aims of this study were to analyze retinal and choroidal changes on optical coherence tomography (OCT) and OCT-Angiography (OCT-A) in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and compare them to other forms of major dementia. We also aimed to analyze the correlation between clinical severity of global cognitive deficiency assessed by the mini-mental state exam (MMSE) score and OCT/OCT-A parameters. METHODS: Retrospective cross-sectional evaluative study of AD, and age-and gender-matched patients with other dementias. Fundus examination, OCT and OCT-A were compared. RESULTS: Ninety-one eyes of AD patients and 53 eyes of patients with other dementias were included. Retinal deposits were found in 6.59% of AD cases. OCT highlighted the presence of hyperreflective deposits and localized areas of outer retina and ellipsoid zone disruption, respectively in 20.87% and 15.38% of AD cases. Hyperreflective foci were noted within inner retinal layers in 4.39% of AD cases. Quantitative analysis revealed a thicker nasal retinal nerve fiber layer (p = 0.001) and ganglion cell complex in superior (p = 0.011) and temporal quadrants (p = 0.009) in eyes of AD patients, compared to other dementias. OCT-A showed a significantly higher fractal dimension of both superficial and deep capillary plexus (p = 0.005), with lower choriocapillaris density (p = 0.003) in AD patients. CONCLUSIONS: Structural OCT could highlight the presence of hyperreflective deposits in AD, probably reflecting beta-amyloid deposits, associated to outer retinal disruptions. Quantitative OCT analysis showed structural differences between AD patients and other dementias, and combined OCT-A could identify microvascular changes in AD patients representing new potential differential diagnosis criteria.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNerve fiber layerOphthalmologyRetinalFundus (uterus)GanglionRetinaOptical coherence tomographyOptical coherence tomography angiographyDementiaDiseasePathologyAnatomyNeurosciencePsychologyGlaucoma and retinal disordersOptical Coherence Tomography ApplicationsRetinal Imaging and Analysis