Pratt School of Engineering
 HOME > pratt    Search Help Login 

Publications [#373694] of Sina Farsiu

Papers Published

  1. Sazhnyev, Y; Sin, T-N; Ma, A; Chang, E; Huynh, L; Roszak, K; Park, S; Choy, K; Farsiu, S; Moshiri, A; Thomasy, SM; Yiu, G, Choroidal Changes in Rhesus Macaques in Aging and Age-Related Drusen., Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, vol. 64 no. 12 (September, 2023), pp. 44 [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/12/31)

    Abstract:

    Purpose

    Choroidal vascular changes occur with normal aging and age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Here, we evaluate choroidal thickness and vascularity in aged rhesus macaques to better understand the choroid's role in this nonhuman primate model of AMD.

    Methods

    We analyzed optical coherence tomography (OCT) images of 244 eyes from 122 rhesus macaques (aged 4-32 years) to measure choroidal thickness (CT) and choroidal vascularity index (CVI). Drusen number, size, and volume were measured by semiautomated annotation and segmentation of OCT images. We performed regression analyses to determine any association of CT or CVI with age, sex, and axial length and to determine if the presence and volume of soft drusen impacted these choroidal parameters.

    Results

    In rhesus macaques, subfoveal CT decreased with age at 3.2 µm/y (R2 = 0.481, P < 0.001), while CVI decreased at 0.66% per year (R2 = 0.257, P < 0.001). Eyes with soft drusen exhibited thicker choroid (179.9 ± 17.5 µm vs. 162.0 ± 27.9 µm, P < 0.001) and higher CVI (0.612 ± 0.051 vs. 0.577 ± 0.093, P = 0.005) than age-matched control animals. Neither CT or CVI appeared to be associated with drusen number, size, or volume in this cohort. However, some drusen in macaques were associated with underlying choroidal vessel enlargement resembling pachydrusen in human patients with AMD.

    Conclusions

    Changes in the choroidal vasculature in rhesus macaques resemble choroidal changes in human aging, but eyes with drusen exhibit choroidal thickening, increased vascularity, and phenotypic characteristics of pachydrusen observed in some patients with AMD.

Duke University * Pratt * Deans * Staff * Faculty * Reload * Login
x