Correlation between central corneal thickness and intraocular pressure peak and fluctuation during the water drinking test in glaucoma patients

Authors

  • Rafael Lacerda Furlanetto Universidade de São Paulo; Faculdade de Medicina; Department of Ophthalmology; Glaucoma Service
  • Antonio Carlos Facio Jr Universidade de São Paulo; Faculdade de Medicina; Department of Ophthalmology; Glaucoma Service
  • Marcelo Hatanaka Universidade de São Paulo; Faculdade de Medicina; Department of Ophthalmology; Glaucoma Service
  • Remo Susanna Junior Universidade de São Paulo; Faculdade de Medicina; Department of Ophthalmology; Glaucoma Service

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322010001000007

Keywords:

Central Corneal Thickness, Intraocular Pressure, Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma, Stress Test, Water Drinking Test

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the correlation between central corneal thickness and outflow facility assessed by intraocular pressure peak and fluctuation during the water drinking test. METHODS: Fifty-five newly diagnosed primary open-angle glaucoma patients submitted to central corneal thickness measurements and water drinking test were enrolled in this retrospective study.;. Patients were divided into three groups according to their central corneal thickness. Pearson's Correlation test was performed in the groups with lower and higher pachymetric values. RESULTS: The mean age was 65,65 ± 28,28 years; 63,63% were female and 52,72% were caucasian. The mean central corneal thickness was 544,32 ± 36,86 µm, and the mean baseline intraocular pressure was 23,36 ± 6,26 mmHg. During the water drinking test, the mean intraocular pressure peak and mean intraocular pressure fluctuation were 30,43 ± 8,13 mmHg and 31,46 ± 18,46%, respectively. No relevant correlation was detected between the central corneal thickness and the intraocular pressure peak (r² = 0,021) or between the central corneal thickness and the intraocular pressure fluctuation (r² = 0,011). Group 1 presented a mean central corneal thickness of 505,81 ± 13,86 µm, and Group 3 was 583,55 ± 27,87 µm (p = 0,001). The mean intraocular pressure peak was 31,05 ± 9,05 mmHg and 27,83 ± 4,92 mmHg in Group 1 and in Group 3, respectively (p = 0,193). The difference of intraocular pressure fluctuation was not statistically significant between Group 1 (mean 28,47±16,25%) and Group3 (mean 33,27 ± 21,27%) (p = 0,43). CONCLUSION: In our case series, no correlation was found between central corneal thickness and water drinkingtest results.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2010-01-01

Issue

Section

Clinical Sciences

How to Cite

Furlanetto, R. L., Facio Jr, A. C., Hatanaka, M., & Susanna Junior, R. (2010). Correlation between central corneal thickness and intraocular pressure peak and fluctuation during the water drinking test in glaucoma patients . Clinics, 65(10), 967-970. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322010001000007