Because alteration of oscillatory potentials of the electroretinogram has been described in diabetic patients without signs of diabetic retinopathy as an early marker of changes in microcirculation, we studied the behavior of these potentials in patients with early-onset hypertension. Electroretinograms were recorded in 24 subjects with essential hypertension (blood pressure > 140/90 mm Hg) and in 9 age-matched normotensive control subjects (blood pressure < 140/90 mm Hg). Diabetes and ocular diseases were considered exclusion criteria. Sitting blood pressure was measured by a single investigator with a mercury sphygmomanometer after each subject had been at rest for 10 minutes. Funduscopic changes in all subjects did not exceed stage I World Health Organization classification. The oscillatory index was calculated by adding waves O1, O2, and O3 within the b wave of the electroretinogram. Statistical analysis was performed with Student's t test for paired and unpaired data and linear regression. The oscillatory index was significantly reduced in hypertensive patients compared with normotensive subjects. An inverse relationship was observed when systolic and diastolic blood pressures were plotted against the oscillatory index. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that the electrical activity of the retina is altered early in the course of hypertension and that the influence of systolic pressure on the oscillatory index is greater than that of diastolic pressure.
Oscillatory potentials of the ERG proved to be a sensitive indicator even in mild disturbances of retinal circulation, such as the first stage of hypertensive retinopathy (WHO classification). Oscillatory indexes (OIs) and blood pressure levels of 24 hypertensive patients in stage 1 of the WHO classification, who underwent an antihypertensive therapy for the first time, were considered. The patients were retested after a mean period of 8 months. A strict inverse correlation was found between OIs and blood pressure levels.
The authors have previously reported that oscillatory potentials (O.P.) of the electroretinogram are impaired in essential hypertensive patients before the appearance of funduscopic changes. They can therefore be considered an early marker of the nervous damage induced by hypertension. Aim of this study was to evaluate whether an antihypertensive regimen could influence the progression of this damage. O.P. were recorded in 35 essential hypertensives before antihypertensive treatment and after one-year treatment. The patients were randomly allocated into 4 treatment groups: 1) beta-blockers 2) ACE-Inhibitors 3) calcium antagonists 4) no pharmacological treatment. At the end of the study, blood pressure was significantly decreased in all but group 4. O.P., similar in the 4 groups at the beginning, were significantly higher at the end of the study only in patients treated with ACE-inhibitors. The results of this study suggest that although all hypotensive agents reduced blood pressure only ACE-I showed a protective effect on the retinal electric electrophysiology in hypertensive patients.
Oscillatory potentials of the electroretinogram are useful to confirm the diagnosis of essential hypertension. Thirty-five hypertensive patients underwent primary antihypertensive therapy with four different treatments. Oscillatory potentials were recorded before the treatment and after 12 months. The oscillatory response increased in a statistically significant manner in the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor group. This is probably caused by the vasodilatation mechanism, which increases the retinal blood flow.
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