Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02679716

Reconstruction of Pathological Changes of the Ophthalmic Artery in Patients With Retinal Artery Occlusion

Hemodynamic Computer-assisted Reconstruction of Pathological Changes at the Origin of the Ophthalmic Artery in Patients With Retinal Artery Occlusion

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (actual)
Sponsor
Vienna Institute for Research in Ocular Surgery · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Retinal artery occlusions (RAO) cause deterioration in visual acuity and visual fields. In computational fluid dynamics (CFD) studies \[1\] 10% of ascending emboli caused RAO, the residual 90% embolized into the cerebral arteries. As only 20% of patients with RAO had a history of stroke, there is a discrepancy between CFD-studies and clinical observations. Mead et al. \[2\] postulated small emboli being washed into the cerebral arteries without causing clinical symptoms of stroke, whereas similar emboli being washed into the ophthalmic artery would cause RAO. There is a discrepancy between CFD-study results and clinical observations in RAO patients, indicating that there could be a high number of RAO-patients having had cerebral ischemies without symptoms of stroke (as postulated by Mead et al.\[2\]). Purpose of the present study is to evaluate hemodynamic pathological changes at the ophthalmic artery origin in patients with RAO detected with an already existing CFD-model

Detailed description

Retinal artery occlusions (RAO) cause deterioration in visual acuity and visual fields. Emboli from plaques of the carotid artery, aortic arch or vegetations of the cardiac valves are the main reasons for RAO. In computational fluid dynamics (CFD) studies \[1\] 10% of ascending emboli caused RAO, the residual 90% embolized into the cerebral arteries. As only 20% of patients with RAO had a history of stroke, there is a discrepancy between CFD-studies and clinical observations. Mead et al. \[2\] postulated small emboli being washed into the cerebral arteries without causing clinical symptoms of stroke, whereas similar emboli being washed into the ophthalmic artery would cause RAO. Hayreh et al. \[3\] reported plaques of the carotid artery to be the main reason for emboli causing RAO. There is a discrepancy between CFD-study results and clinical observations in RAO patients, indicating that there could be a high number of RAO-patients having had cerebral ischemies without symptoms of stroke (as postulated by Mead et al.\[2\]). A recently published report showed ischemic cerebral lesions in 38% of patients with RAO without neurological symptoms \[4\]. The fact, that the 3-year risk of patients with RAO to develop stroke is doubled \[5\], underlines further associations between RAO and stroke. Purpose of the present study is to evaluate hemodynamic pathological changes at the ophthalmic artery origin in patients with RAO detected with an already existing CFD-model References (detailed references are provided in the reference section) : \[1\] Leisser et al., \[2\] Mead et al., \[3\] Hayreh et al., \[4\] Lee et al., \[5\] Chang et al.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERMRI of the cerebral arteriesMRI of the cerebral arteries is performed

Timeline

Start date
2014-12-01
Primary completion
2017-07-31
Completion
2018-07-31
First posted
2016-02-10
Last updated
2019-10-22

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Austria

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02679716. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.