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Volume 113, Issue 5, Pages 786-791 (May 2006)


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Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thickness in Normal Children Measured with Optical Coherence Tomography

Daniel J. Salchow, MD, Yuri S. Oleynikov, MD, PhD, Michael F. Chiang, MD, Shana E. Kennedy-Salchow, MS, Kevin Langton, CRA, James C. Tsai, MD, Lama A. Al-Aswad, MDCorresponding Author Information

Received 8 July 2005; accepted 17 January 2006.

Purpose

To measure the peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness in normal children.

Design

Observational cross-sectional study.

Participants

Ninety-two eyes of 92 normal children ages 4 to 17 years presenting to the Ophthalmology Clinic at the Harkness Eye Institute, Department of Ophthalmology, Columbia University.

Methods

Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness was measured with optical coherence tomography (OCT). Patient cooperation and signal strength of the OCT scans were assessed. Optic disc photographs were evaluated by a glaucoma specialist in a masked fashion. Eyes with abnormal optic discs were excluded. One eye of each subject was randomly selected for statistical analysis. The effect of several factors on RNFL thickness was investigated statistically.

Main Outcome Measures

Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness.

Results

Ninety-one percent of the study subjects were Hispanic; 8%, African American; and 1%, Caucasian. Optical coherence tomography measurements were obtained in 117 of 121 (96.7%) subjects, and disc photographs were available for 92 of them. Mean age (±standard deviation [SD]) was 9.7±2.7 years. Mean global RNFL thickness (±SD) was 107.0±11.1 μm (range, 78.1–134.6). The RNFL was thickest inferiorly (136.9±16.9 μm) and superiorly (135.4±19.3 μm), thinner nasally (83.0±18.0 μm), and thinnest temporally (72.5±13.4 μm). In univariate regression analysis, age (P = 0.013) and refraction (P<0.001) had a significant effect on RNFL thickness; age had a significant effect on refraction (P<0.001). When controlling for refraction, age no longer had a significant effect.

Conclusions

Optical coherence tomography can be used to measure RNFL thickness in children. Refraction had an effect on RNFL thickness. In normal children, variation in RNFL thickness is large. The normative data provided by this study may assist in identifying changes in RNFL thickness in children.

Harkness Eye Institute, Department of Ophthalmology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests to Lama A. Al-Aswad, MD, Harkness Eye Institute, 635 West 165th Street, New York, NY 10032

 Manuscript no. 2005-623.

Supported by a Career Development Award from Research to Prevent Blindness, New York, New York (MFC), and by the National Eye Institute, Bethesda, Maryland (grant no.: EY13972 [MFC]).

The authors have no financial interest in the devices or techniques used in the study.

PII: S0161-6420(06)00115-1

doi:10.1016/j.ophtha.2006.01.036


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