# Assessing Choroidal Thickness in Pediatric Patients With Unilateral Strabismic Amblyopia by Using Spectral Domain-Enhanced Depth Imaging-Optical Coherence Tomography

**Authors:** Cem Evereklioglu, Ayşe Merve Keskin, Hatice Kübra Sönmez, Hatice Arda

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.60219 · Cureus · 2024-05-13

## TL;DR

This study found that children with strabismic amblyopia have thicker choroids in both eyes compared to healthy children, using advanced imaging technology.

## Contribution

The study is the first to assess choroidal thickness in pediatric strabismic amblyopia using SD-EDI-OCT.

## Key findings

- Choroidal thickness in amblyopic and fellow eyes was significantly greater than in healthy controls.
- Subfoveal choroidal thickness negatively correlated with axial length.
- No correlation was found between choroidal thickness and age or visual acuity.

## Abstract

Objective

In this study, we aimed to evaluate the choroidal thickness in patients with unilateral strabismic amblyopia by using spectral domain-enhanced depth imaging-optical coherence tomography (SD-EDI-OCT) (Heidelberg Engineering GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany).

Methods

Twenty-five children with strabismic amblyopia and 20 age- and sex-matched healthy controls were included in this study. Seven sections were obtained, each comprising 25 repetitive images from each section at 200-micron intervals, and measurements were taken from nine different points at vertical and horizontal lines (1 and 3 mm from the subfoveal, superior, inferior, temporal, and nasal regions), centered on the fovea, using SD-EDI-OCT. Choroidal thickness values were obtained by measuring the distance between the basal border of the retinal pigment epithelium and the choroidoscleral border. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare choroidal thickness between the amblyopic and the control groups.

Results

The mean age of children with amblyopia and that of controls were 8.4 ±2.7 and 9.9 ±3.3 years, respectively (p=0.120). The mean subfoveal choroidal thickness was 372.8 ±78.9 μm in amblyopic eyes and 372.4 ±79.3 μm in the fellow eyes, both of which were thicker than the control eyes (310.9 ±76.3 μm; p<0.05 for each). Similarly, the mean values for the choroidal thickness of the amblyopic children at 1 mm nasal (320 ±86 μm), 1 mm superior (363 ±70 μm), and 3 mm superior (336 ±62 μm) were also significantly thicker than those of the corresponding control eyes (p<0.05 for each). There was a negative correlation between the subfoveal choroidal thickness and axial length (r=-0.332, p=0.005). There were no correlations between the choroidal thickness, age, and visual acuity.

Conclusions

The choroidal thicknesses of strabismic and fellow eyes were similar in patients with strabismic amblyopia. However, the choroidal thickness of both eyes in strabismic children was significantly thicker than those of the healthy controls. Emmetropization may be defective in both eyes of strabismic amblyopic patients.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** strabismic amblyopia (MONDO:0001019)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Choroidal (MESH:D002833), Unilateral Strabismic Amblyopia (MESH:D000550)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11168739/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11168739