F. Iwata et al., ASSOCIATION OF VISUAL-FIELD, CUP-DISC RATIO, AND MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING OF OPTIC CHIASM, Archives of ophthalmology, 115(6), 1997, pp. 729-732
Objective: To assess the association of visual field, vertical cup-dis
c (VC/D) ratio, and vertical height of optic chiasm. Design: Case seri
es. Setting: Outpatient eye clinic. Patients: Eighteen patients with l
ow, normal, or elevated intraocular pressure, with or without visual f
ield defects. Intervention: Measurement of visual field, VC/D ratio, a
nd vertical height of optic chiasm. Main Outcome Measures: Association
between VC/D ratio and visual field defects compared with association
between vertical height of optic chiasm and visual field defects. Res
ults: Visual field defects were graded as 0, 1 to 10, and 11 to 20 (fr
om least to most severe). Group mean VC/D ratios were 0.47 (0), 0.55 (
1-10), and 0.69 (11-20) for right eyes and 0.48 (0), 0.57 (1-10), and
0.75 (11-20) for left eyes. The significance level for trend was P = .
02 for right eyes and P = .006 for left eyes. Group mean chiasm height
s were 3.5 (0), 2.9 (1-10), and 2.2 (11-20) mm for right eyes and 3.5
(0), 2.8 (1-10), and 2.2 (11-20) mm for left eyes. The significance le
vel for trend was P < .001 for right eyes and P = .002 for left eyes.
To assess the simultaneous effects of VC/D ratio and chiasm height on
the visual field defects groups, we used ordinal logistic regression m
odels. Models with both variables implied that chiasm height was a str
onger predictor of visual field defects group than VC/D ratio (for rig
ht eyes, P = .04 [VC/D ratio], P = .001 [chiasm height]; for left eyes
, P = .11 [VC/D ratio], P = .005 [chiasm height]). Conclusions: When c
hiasm and VC/D ratio were analyzed in the same model, chiasm height wa
s a stronger predictor of visual field defects. In advanced visual fie
ld defects, the optic chiasm is atrophic.