Characterizing the Preferred Retinal Locus and Fixation Stability in Diabetic Macular Ischemia: A One-Year Study
Characterizing the Preferred Retinal Locus and Fixation Stability in Diabetic Macular Ischemia: A One-Year Study
Blog Article
Eyes with maculopathy usually have poor fixation stability (FS) and develop a new preferred retinal locus (PRL).The exact FS and PRL have never been studied in diabetic macular ischemia (DMI).In this one-year observational study, we recruited 79 patients (145 eyes) with evidence of DMI on optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA).
Microperimetry (MP) was performed at baseline and 52 weeks.Overall, DMI eyes demonstrated relatively stable FS without evolving into eccentric fixation over one year.When comparing the better-seeing eye (BSE) with the Food Items worse-seeing eye (WSE) in eyes with bilateral DMI, the latter presented with a larger bivariate contour ellipse area (BCEA) initially but gradually aligned with the one in the BSE at the end of the study.
Conversely, the foveolar retinal sensitivity (RS) worsened significantly alongside the extension of disorganization of the retinal inner layers (DRIL) SLA in the WSE at one year despite the best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) being maintained.This suggests that foveolar RS might reflect the start of DMI deterioration more sensitively than BCVA.