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. 2010 Feb;117(2):259-66.
doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2009.06.058. Epub 2009 Dec 6.

Cerebrospinal fluid pressure in glaucoma: a prospective study

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Cerebrospinal fluid pressure in glaucoma: a prospective study

Ruojin Ren et al. Ophthalmology. 2010 Feb.

Abstract

Purpose: To assess whether a low cerebrospinal fluid pressure (CSF-P) is associated with open-angle glaucoma in eyes with normal intraocular pressure (IOP).

Design: Prospective, interventional study.

Participants: The study included 43 patients with open-angle glaucoma (14 with a normal IOP, and 29 with an elevated IOP) and 71 subjects without glaucoma.

Interventions: All patients underwent standardized ophthalmologic and neurologic examinations and measurement of lumbar CSF-P.

Main outcome measures: Cerebrospinal fluid pressure and IOP.

Results: Lumbar CSF-P was significantly (P<0.001) lower in the normal IOP glaucoma group (9.5+/-2.2 mmHg) than in the high IOP glaucoma group (11.7+/-2.7 mmHg) or the control group (12.9+/-1.9 mmHg). The trans-lamina cribrosa pressure difference (IOP minus CSF-P) was significantly (P<0.001) higher in the normal IOP glaucoma group (6.6+/-3.6 mmHg) and the high-IOP glaucoma group (12.5+/-4.1 mmHg) than in the control group (1.4+/-1.7 mmHg). The extent of glaucomatous visual field loss was negatively correlated with the height of the CSF-P and positively correlated with the trans-lamina cribrosa pressure difference. In the control group, CSF-P was significantly correlated with both systolic blood pressure (P = 0.04) and IOP (P<0.001). The trans-lamina cribrosa pressure difference was not significantly associated with blood pressure (P = 0.97).

Conclusions: In open-angle glaucoma with normal IOP, CSF-P is abnormally low, leading to an abnormally high trans-lamina cribrosa pressure difference. Pathogenetically, a low CSF-P in normal-IOP glaucoma may be similar to a high IOP in high-IOP glaucoma. Consequently, the glaucomatous visual field defect is positively correlated with the trans-lamina cribrosa pressure difference and inversely correlated with the CSF-P. In nonglaucomatous subjects, CSF-P, blood pressure, and IOP are significantly associated with each other.

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Comment in

  • Ethical problems in invasive clinical research.
    Grzybowski A, Sade R, Loff B. Grzybowski A, et al. Ophthalmology. 2011 Apr;118(4):787-8; author reply 788-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2011.01.020. Ophthalmology. 2011. PMID: 21459225 No abstract available.

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