



All eyes may be on a new study from investigators at the Seoul National University Boramae Medical Center, as scientists are suggesting that a patient’s eyes may be a window to the brain for people with early Parkinson's disease (PD). The new study—published recently in Neurology through an article titled “Retinal thinning associates with nigral dopaminergic loss in de novo Parkinson disease”—found that the thinning of the retina, the lining of nerve cells in the back of the eye, is linked to the loss of dopaminergic brain cells, a hallmark for PD.

“Our study is the first to show a link between the thinning of the retina and a known sign of the progression of the disease—the loss of brain cells that produce dopamine,” explains co-lead study author Jee-Young Lee, M.D., Ph.D., of the Seoul Metropolitan Government – Seoul National University Boramae Medical Center in South Korea. “We also found the thinner the retina, the greater the severity of disease. These discoveries may mean that neurologists may eventually be able to use a simple eye scan to detect Parkinson's disease in its earliest stages, before problems with movement begin.”

The current study involved 49 people with an average age of 69 who were diagnosed with Parkinson's disease an average of two years earlier but who had not yet started medication. They were compared to 54 people without the disease who were matched for age.

Additionally, the research team evaluated each study participant with a complete eye exam as well as high-resolution eye scans that use light waves to take pictures of each layer of the retina. Moreover, 28 of the participants with Parkinson's disease also had dopamine transporter positron emission tomography (PET) imaging to measure the density of dopamine-producing cells in the brain.

“Ophthalmologic examination and macula optical coherence tomography scans were performed with additional microperimetry, N-(3-[18F]fluoropropyl)-2-carbomethoxy-3-(4-iodophenyl) nortropane PET, and 3T MRI scans were done in patients with PD only,” the authors wrote.”Retinal layer thickness and volume were measured in subfields of the 1-, 2.22-, and 3.45-mm Early Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy Study circle and compared in patients with PD and controls. Correlation of inner retinal layer thinning with microperimetric response was examined in patients with PD, and the relationships between retinal layer thickness and dopamine transporter densities in the ipsilateral caudate, anterior and posterior putamen, and substantia nigra were analyzed.”

Interestingly, the researchers found retina thinning, most notably in the two inner layers of the five layers of the retina, in those with Parkinson's disease. For example, for those with Parkinson's disease, the innermost layer of the retina in one section of the eye had an average thickness of 35 μm compared to an average thickness of 37 μm for those without the disease.

The Seoul team also found the thinning of the retina corresponded with the loss of brain cells that produce dopamine. It also corresponded with the severity of disease. When disability from the disease is measured on a scale of one to five, the people with the most thinning of the retina, or thickness of less than 30 μm, had average scores of slightly over two, while people with the least thinning, or thickness of about 47 μm, had average scores of about 1.5.

“Larger studies are needed to confirm our findings and to determine just why retina thinning, and the loss of dopamine-producing cells are linked,” Dr Lee concludes “If confirmed, retina scans may not only allow earlier treatment of Parkinson's disease but more precise monitoring of treatments that could slow progression of the disease as well.”



























