Digitalni repozitorij raziskovalnih organizacij Slovenije

Izpis gradiva
A+ | A- | Pomoč | SLO | ENG

Naslov:Interocular symmetry in dynamic retinal vessel analysis among healthy adults
Avtorji:ID Mendes Wefelnberg, Michael (Avtor)
ID Baumann, Freerk T. (Avtor)
ID Guthoff, Henning (Avtor)
ID Zubac, Damir (Avtor)
Datoteke:URL URL - Izvorni URL, za dostop obiščite https://www.bjbms.org/ojs/index.php/bjbms/article/view/14216
 
.pdf PDF - Predstavitvena datoteka, prenos (1,52 MB)
MD5: 870BCED99A878007CBDC35821BDB3949
 
Jezik:Angleški jezik
Tipologija:1.01 - Izvirni znanstveni članek
Organizacija:Logo ZRS Koper - Znanstveno-raziskovalno središče Koper / Centro di Ricerche Scientifiche Capodistria
Povzetek:Dynamic retinal vessel analysis is a non-invasive approach for assessing retinal microvascular endothelial function, yet the extent to which eye selection, interocular variability, and systemic physiological factors influence dynamic retinal vessel analyzer (DRVA)-derived biomarkers remains insufficiently defined. This prospective methodological study aimed to evaluate the interocular symmetry and absolute and relative reliability of arterial flicker-induced dilation (aFID), venular flicker-induced dilation (vFID), and arteriolar constriction (aCON), and to determine whether these parameters are moderated by eye dominance, peak oxygen uptake (V̇O₂ peak), or intraocular pressure (IOP) in healthy individuals. Twenty apparently healthy adults completed two laboratory visits. During the first visit, aerobic capacity was assessed by cardiopulmonary exercise testing until volitional exhaustion. During the second visit, IOP, resting blood pressure, eye dominance, and retinal vascular endothelial function were assessed using DRVA in both eyes in randomized order. Interocular differences were examined using paired comparisons, Bland–Altman analysis, reliability statistics, and linear mixed-effects models accounting for bilateral measurements within participants. No significant differences were observed between the left and right eyes for aFID, vFID, or aCON. Bland–Altman analysis showed no systematic interocular bias across DRVA-derived parameters, although the limits of agreement were widest for aFID, indicating greater interocular variability. Relative reliability was highest for vFID, followed by aCON, whereas aFID showed only fair agreement. Similarly, absolute reliability analyses identified vFID as the most stable biomarker, with the lowest coefficient of variation, while aFID demonstrated the greatest variability. Linear mixed-effects models showed no significant moderating effects of eye dominance, V̇O₂ peak, or IOP on aFID, vFID, or aCON. These findings suggest that retinal vascular endothelial responses measured by DRVA are not systematically influenced by eye dominance or selected systemic physiological factors in healthy young adults. However, given the observed interocular variability, particularly for aFID, assessment of both eyes should be considered in clinical and research settings to improve measurement precision and reproducibility.
Ključne besede:Microvascula rcirculation, retina, oxygen kinetics, microcirculation, circulation, flow mediated dilation
Status publikacije:Objavljeno
Verzija publikacije:Recenzirani rokopis
Datum sprejetja članka:07.05.2026
Datum objave:08.05.2026
Leto izida:2026
Št. strani:17 str. [ahead of print]
Številčenje:Vol. [ahead of print], [article no.]
PID:20.500.12556/DiRROS-29374 Novo okno
UDK:612.1:616.98-036.21:578.834
ISSN pri članku:2831-090X
DOI:10.17305/bb.2026.14216 Novo okno
COBISS.SI-ID:277946627 Novo okno
Avtorske pravice:Copyright (c) 2026 Michael Mendes Wefelnberg, Freerk T. Baumann, Henning Guthoff, Damir Zubac
Opomba:Nasl. z nasl. zaslona; Soavtorji: Freerk T. Baumann, Henning Guthoff, Damir Zubac; Opis vira z dne 13. 5. 2026;
Datum objave v DiRROS:13.05.2026
Število ogledov:119
Število prenosov:83
Metapodatki:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
:
Kopiraj citat
  
Objavi na:Bookmark and Share


Postavite miškin kazalec na naslov za izpis povzetka. Klik na naslov izpiše podrobnosti ali sproži prenos.

Gradivo je del revije

Naslov:Biomolecules & biomedicine
Skrajšan naslov:Biomol. biomed.
Založnik:Association of Basic Medical Sciences of FBIH
ISSN:2831-090X
COBISS.SI-ID:148721411 Novo okno

Licence

Licenca:CC BY 4.0, Creative Commons Priznanje avtorstva 4.0 Mednarodna
Povezava:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.sl
Opis:To je standardna licenca Creative Commons, ki daje uporabnikom največ možnosti za nadaljnjo uporabo dela, pri čemer morajo navesti avtorja.
Začetek licenciranja:08.05.2026

Nazaj