Take-home message

  1. In the last 2 decades, various non-invasive quantitative methods have been developed to study the retinal microvascular network in detail.
  2. The retinal microvascular network offers a powerful tool to study the role of the microcirculation in cardiovascular disease.
  3. Retinal vascular imaging should be part of the diagnostic work-up of patients at cardiovascular risk.

Introduction

In a previous issue of the E-Journal-of Cardiology-Practice I reviewed the application of contemporary ophthalmological examinations in the diagnostics and progression of hypertensive disease [1]. In that review I focused on novel non-invasive methods for retinal microcirculatory investigations and their use in assessing microvascular changes in hypertension. In the last 2 decades these new methods have led to a revival of quantitative retinal microvascular analyses as a diagnostic and prognostic tool. Given the recent wide application of retinal microvascular imaging in other forms of cardiovascular disease than hypertension, this short review aims to discuss whether such analyses could have broader prognostic value for examining the progression of cardiovascular diseases and whether they can help in tracking the efficacy of various forms of treatment.

Quantitative non-invasive evaluation of the retinal microcirculation

Ophthalmological inspection, with a focus on the retina, has been a standard procedure in the diagnostic work-up of hypertensive or diabetic patients for many decades. The classical procedure was based on a semiquantitative grading system. However, in the last few decades, new quantitative and non-invasive technologies have become available to evaluate and follow-up changes in the microcirculation of the retina much more precisely. Fluorescent angiography, introduced in the 1960s, offered the possibility of testing the patency and leak of retinal microvessels as well as their flow characteristics. However, the use of fluorescent substances still involved a certain degree of invasiveness. Other - although non-invasive - imaging technologies, such as magnetic resonance imaging, are less suited to the task because of the limited spatial resolution to measure microvascular parameters quantitatively [2]. Around 20 years ago, a major new approach to retinal imaging was introduced by Wong, Hubbard and colleagues which allowed a quantitative analysis of the entire retinal microvascular network [3]. They used a non-mydriatic video camera with advanced software to analyse these networks off-line in terms of microvascular diameters, wall-to-lumen ratios, vessel numbers, branching angles and degree of vessel tortuosity. A major advantage of this approach is its potential to make repeated measurements in the same individuals for follow-up studies. Recently, Wong and colleagues reviewed the results of these studies in a range of patient or population-based studies [4]. Their work suggests that this technology is indeed suited for prognostic studies of the retinal microcirculation in the development or treatment of various cardiovascular diseases.

Around the same time, Vilser and colleagues in Germany introduced the dynamic Retinal Vessel Analyzer or RVA (Imedos, Germany) to study retinal haemodynamics [5]. This non-invasive camera and image acquisition system allows not only the static study of the morphology of the retinal microcirculation but also the study of the dynamic changes in vessel diameter upon stimulation with flicker light. Although such changes have been interpreted as indicators of the regulation of vascular tone, the underlying physiological mechanisms still need further investigation. A recent review paper gives an excellent overview of the applications of the DRVA technique [6].  Another potentially important new approach to non-invasive quantitative retinal microvascular imaging was the introduction of the scanning laser Doppler flowmetry (SLDF) by Harazny and colleagues from Heidelberg, Germany in 2007 [7]. This technique combines confocal and laser Doppler measurements and used an advanced software program to assess both structural and functional flow-related microvascular parameters.  However, the clinical application of this approach has been limited due to a lack of commercial development of the necessary equipment.

Recently, a commercially available adaptive optics (AO) retinal imaging system, which was originally developed for astronomic applications, has been successfully used in a range of clinical studies. This AO system was developed in France (rtx-1 Adaptive Optics Camera; Imagine Eyes) and allows acquisition of high-quality morphological images of retinal microvessels with a resolution of up to 1 micrometer.  This system is now widely used throughout the world in ophthalmological centres collaborating with cardiovascular specialists. Rizzoni and colleagues [2] recently reviewed the initial result of this non-invasive method to evaluate retinal microvascular structure and function. A potential advantage of this method is that it also allows the evaluation of endothelial function with a flicker light stimulus, although more studies are required to confirm the physiological basis of this application. Figure 1 shows an example of a morphological analysis of an arteriole in the human retina.