Hemorheologic abnormalities associated with HIV infection: In vivo assessment of retinal microvascular blood flow
2006
PURPOSE. To evaluate retinal microvascular blood flow in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)‐infected individuals using scanning laser Doppler flowmetry (SLDF) and to seek correlations between flow and various laboratory measures that may predict alterations in flow. METHODS. The Heidelberg Retina Flowmeter and SLDF software were used to acquire in vivo retinal blood flow data from 24 HIV-infected individuals and 16 HIV-negative control subjects. In each subject, separate scans were performed in each of six retinal regions: nasal parapapillary retina; macula; and the superior, nasal, inferior, and temporal periphery. Erythrocyte aggregation (assessed in vitro by a fully automatic erythrocyte aggregometer and by zeta sedimentation ratio [ZSR, a hematocrit-independent sedimentation rate]), serum fibrinogen level, plasma viscosity, and leukocyte rigidity (assessed in vitro with a cell transit analyzer) were compared with flow in selected regions. RESULTS. Flow was significantly higher in the periphery (superior, nasal, inferior, temporal) than in the posterior retina (nasal parapapillary retina, macula). Flow was highest in the temporal periphery for both HIV-infected subjects and control subjects. Flow in the posterior retina was significantly lower in HIVinfected subjects than in control subjects (P 0.0001). Among HIV-infected individuals, flow in the macula correlated negatively with ZSR (r 0.397, P 0.0547) and leukocyte rigidity (r 0.505, P 0.0119). CONCLUSIONS. Microvascular blood flow in the posterior retina is reduced in HIV-infected individuals. Both increased erythrocyte aggregation and increased leukocyte rigidity contribute to this hemorheologic abnormality. (Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2006;47:3933‐3938) DOI:10.1167/iovs.06-0138
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