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Volume 114, Issue 9, Pages 1755-1762.e1 (September 2007)


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Morphology and Long-term Changes of Choroidal Vascular Structure in Highly Myopic Eyes with and without Posterior Staphyloma

Muka Moriyama, MD, Kyoko Ohno-Matsui, MDCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Soh Futagami, MD, Takeshi Yoshida, MD, Kengo Hayashi, MD, Noriaki Shimada, MD, Ariko Kojima, MD, Takashi Tokoro, MD, Manabu Mochizuki, MD

Received 18 July 2006; received in revised form 20 November 2006; accepted 21 November 2006. published online 16 March 2007.

Purpose

To determine whether the choroidal vasculature is altered in highly myopic eyes with or without posterior staphyloma using indocyanine green angiography. In addition, to analyze long-term changes of the choroidal vasculature in patients who were observed for at least 5 years with indocyanine green angiography.

Design

Consecutive, retrospective, observational case series.

Participants

Three hundred twenty-one eyes of 195 patients with high myopia.

Methods

Indocyanine green angiograms were analyzed, and the effect of posterior staphyloma on the choroidal vasculature was studied. Changes in the indocyanine green–determined choroidal vasculature detected after at least 5 years were analyzed in 57 eyes of 36 patients.

Main Outcome Measures

Indocyanine green angiography assessment of the choroidal vasculature.

Results

A choroidal flush was detected in all of the control eyes but only 52 (16.2%) of the 321 highly myopic eyes. A displacement of the entry site of the posterior ciliary arteries into the choroid was observed in 76.6% of the eyes with posterior staphyloma and in 25.3% of the eyes without (P<0.001). There were fewer large choroidal veins in the posterior fundus, and in some cases, there was marked variation in the diameter of neighboring large choroidal veins in the highly myopic patients. Of 57 eyes that were followed for >5 years, 9 (15.8%) showed changes in the choroidal vascular structure in the later indocyanine green angiograms. Four of 9 eyes showed dilation or enlargement of posterior routes of choroidal venous outflow, 5 showed narrowing of the large choroidal veins, and 2 had a loss of the large choroidal veins (overlapped). One patient developed choroidal neovascularization after loss of the large choroidal veins.

Conclusions

These findings indicate that the choroidal vasculature can be significantly altered in highly myopic eyes, and this is more prevalent in eyes with posterior staphyloma. Whether these alterations are related to the development of chorioretinal lesions in highly myopic eyes is now being investigated.

Available online: March 16, 2007.

Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo, Japan.

Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to Kyoko Ohno-Matsui, MD, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, 1-5-45 Yushima, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113, Japan.

 Manuscript no. 2006-792.

 Supported in part by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan (research grant nos. 16390495, 17591823).

 The authors do not have financial interest in any products/drugs discussed in the article.

PII: S0161-6420(06)01659-9

doi:10.1016/j.ophtha.2006.11.034


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