dc.description.abstract | Purpose: To investigate whether retinal vessel calibre measurements on optical retinal photography are affected by light and dark exposure prior to photography and
whether the vessel calibre changes during an imaging sequence of several images.
<p>Methods: Digital optical retinal photographs were obtained from 32 healthy
adults in two separate image sequences of six images during 1 min; one sequence
with 10 min of dark exposure and one with 10 min of light exposure prior to imaging. Retinal arteriolar and venular calibres were measured computer-assisted and
summarized as central retinal artery and vein equivalents (CRAE and CRVE).
Outcome measures were difference in calibres after prior light versus prior dark
exposure and difference in calibre during each of the two imaging sequences.
<p>Results: CRVE was wider with prior light exposure (2.7%, p = 0.0001), comparing the first image in each image sequence. Within each sequence, there
was a venular dilatation from first to last image, both with prior light exposure
(1.7%, p = 0.0003) and prior dark exposure (3.1%, p < 0.0001), with the
change less pronounced with prior light exposure (p = 0.0164). CRAE showed
no significant change in either outcome.
<p>Conclusions: Retinal venular calibre was wider with light exposure prior to
imaging and increased slightly during the imaging sequences, less pronounced
after prior light than dark exposure. Measurement error due to these effects
will probably be reduced by avoiding dark prior to imaging, and a possible
bias effect of endothelial dysfunction may possibly be reduced by measuring
calibre on an image taken early in the image sequence. | en_US |