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1From the Devers Eye Institute, Legacy Health System, Portland, Oregon; the 2Department of Biomedical Engineering, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana; the 4Department of Ophthalmology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama; the 5Singapore Eye Research Institute (SERI), Singapore National Eye Center, Singapore; 6Third Eye Associates, Camden, New Jersey; and the 7LSU Eye Center, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. The trephinated ONH and peripapillary sclera from both eyes of three early glaucoma (EG) monkeys (one eye normal, one eye with laser-induced EG) were serial sectioned at 3-µm thickness, with the embedded tissue block face stained and imaged after each cut. The images were aligned and stacked in a 3-D volume, within which the BMO, ASCO, ALI, PLI, PSCO, and ASAS were delineated in 40 digital, radial, and sagittal sections. An ellipse was fitted to the 80 BMO points to establish a BMO zero reference plane, on which all other points were projected. The distance from each projected point to the BMO centroid (offset) and BMO zero reference plane (depth) were calculated and compared regionally between normal and EG eyes, both overall and within each monkey, by analysis of variance.
RESULTS. BMO was the clinically visible optic disc margin in all six eyes. The neural canal architecture was highly variable in the three normal eyes. Radial expansion of the neural canal was greatest posteriorly in the EG eyes. Axial elongation of the canal was less pronounced overall but was regionally present within all three EG eyes. ASAS was regionally radially expanded and anteriorly displaced within two of the three EG eyes.
CONCLUSIONS. Profound deformation of the neural canal and ASAS architecture are present in young adult monkey eyes at the onset of ONH surface change in early experimental glaucoma.
We have previously demonstrated permanent deformation of the ONH connective tissues within serial histologic sections2 and two-dimensionally delineated, digital, three-dimensional (3-D) reconstructions of monkey ONHs with early experimental glaucoma.2 In both the histologic and 3-D reconstruction studies, expansion of the anterior portion of the neural canal (Bruchs membrane opening [BMO] and the anterior laminar insertion) was present within the optic nerve heads of the monkey with early glaucoma (EG).
In the present report, we introduce a new method for 3-D delineation of ONH and peripapillary scleral landmarks (see Fig. 1 ) within the previously reported ONH connective tissue reconstructions2 and test the methods reproducibility. In this, the first of five reports devoted to quantification of ONH and peripapillary scleral neural and connective tissue architecture, we concentrate on the architecture of the neural canal wall and its relationship to the anterior-most aspect of the subarachnoid space.
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Deformation of the connective tissues of the neural canal in early glaucoma is important because it is evidence that the tissues which underlie the clinical phenomenon of glaucomatous excavation are damaged early in the neuropathy. Three dimensionally quantifying these deformations also allows us to construct and refine computational finite element models of IOP-related connective tissue stress and strain within these same ONHs.14 15 16 17
In this article, we report the first clinical visualization of the histologically derived neural canal landmarksBMO, the anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO), the anterior laminar insertion point (ALI), the posterior laminar insertion point (PLI), the posterior scleral canal opening (PSCO), and the anterior-most projection of the subarachnoid space (ASAS)by digitally superimposing them onto confocal scanning laser tomographic (CSLT) images. Using these landmarks, we detected and characterized ONH neural canal connective tissue deformation at a very early stage of the disease.
| Materials and Methods |
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Monkey Euthanatization and Perfusion Fixation at Prescribed IOP
For each monkey, both eyes were cannulated with a 27-gauge needle under deep pentobarbital anesthesia, and the IOP was set to 10 mm Hg with an adjustable saline reservoir. After a minimum of 30 minutes, the monkey was perfusion fixed via the descending aorta with 1 L of 4% buffered hypertonic paraformaldehyde solution followed by 6 L of 5% buffered hypertonic glutaraldehyde solution. Both the paraformaldehyde and glutaraldehyde were buffered in 1 M Sorensons solution (0.15 M KH2PO4 and 0.85 M Na2HPO4). Osmolarity of each solution was approximately 0.4 osm/L. After perfusion fixation, IOP was maintained for 1 hour, after which each eye was enucleated, all extraorbital tissues were removed, and the anterior chamber was removed 2 to 3 mm posterior to the limbus. By gross inspection, perfusion was excellent in all six eyes. The posterior scleral shells with intact ONH, choroid, and retina were placed in 5% glutaraldehyde solution for storage.
Generation of the Aligned Serial Section Images of Each Optic Nerve Head
In each eye, the ONH and surrounding peripapillary sclera were trephined (6-mm-diameter), pierced with four to seven 10-0 polypropylene alignment sutures (Prolene; Ethicon, Somerville, NJ), and photographed to document the position of the alignment sutures in the clinical ONH surface. The tissue was dehydrated through a series of graded ethanol baths, cleared in chloroform, and infiltrated with paraffin (TissuePrep 2; Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA) with an automatic tissue processor (Tissue-Tek II; Ames Division, Miles Laboratories, Inc., Elkhart, IN). The specimen was oriented so that superior was up, embedded in paraffin, and mounted on a microtome (RM2165; Leica, Wetzlar, Germany) so that the vitreous side of the ONH surface was visible in the block in a clinically appropriate orientation (see Fig. 2 of our previous publication2 ). A 1080 x 1520-pixel charge-coupled device [CCD] camera (Spot RT; Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI) was positioned so that an image of the centered, embedded tissue block surface could be acquired at a resolution of 2.5 x 2.5 µm per pixel (see Fig. 3 of our previous publication2 ). The block was then sectioned at 3.0-µm thickness without imaging until the ends of at least two fiducial sutures were visible in the image. At that point, a 1:1 (vol/vol) mixture of ponceau S and acid fuchsin stains was manually applied to the surface of the embedded tissue block, staining only the exposed face of the connective tissues. The excess stain was then blotted away, and the stained surface of the embedded tissue block was imaged. Then, another 3.0-µm section was cut away, and the staining and imaging process was repeated.
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3-D Delineation of ONH and Peripapillary Scleral Landmark Points within 40 Digital, Radial, Sagittal Slices of Each Reconstruction
Using custom software (based on the Visualization Toolkit [VTK] Clifton Park, NY), the 3-D ONH reconstruction was loaded into memory on a remote Linux server with four, 64-bit, Itanium2 processors, and 32 GB RAM. The delineator assigned the approximate center of the neural canal as that reconstructions center of rotation, around which 40, 7-voxel-thick, radial, sagittal slices of the digital 3-D reconstruction are served at 4.5° intervals to the delineators workstation (Fig. 1) across a Gigabit Ethernet network.
Within each 7-voxel-thick, radial, sagittal data slice, the delineator marked seven landmark surfaces (Fig. 1E 1F) , and six pairs of neural canal landmark points (one point on each side of the canal; Fig. 1E 1G ). The landmark surfaces were (1) the internal limiting membrane (vitreoretinal interface); (2) the anterior and posterior surfaces of the peripapillary sclera; (3) the anterior and posterior surfaces of the lamina cribrosa; (4) the external surfaces of the central retinal vessels; (5) Bruchs membrane; (6) the neural canal wall (the boundary between the neural and connective tissues beginning anteriorly at Bruchs membrane opening, proceeding posteriorly along the border tissues of Elschnig, through the scleral canal, and along the pia mater boundary to the posterior edge of the reconstruction); and (7) the subarachnoid space (internal surface of the dural sheath and external surface of the pia mater).
The neural canal landmark points (Fig. 1G) are (1) Bruchs membrane opening (BMO); (2) the anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO); (3) the anterior laminar insertion (ALI); (4) the posterior laminar insertion (PLI); (5) the posterior scleral canal opening (PSCO); and (6) the anterior-most aspect of the subarachnoid space (ASAS).
Within each 7-voxel-thick, radial, sagittal data slice, the seven surfaces or boundaries and the six neural canal landmarks are marked within the central 1-voxel-thick sagittal section image by mouse-clicking, while the cross hairs were over the desired landmark location (Fig. 1G) . While marking in the sagittal section view, the delineator simultaneously viewed an adjacent window showing the cross hairs 3-D location within a digital transverse section image slaved to the sagittal data slice view (Fig. 1H) . Thus, within the 3-D reconstruction, each landmark or surface point was chosen with full awareness of the points location within both the sagittal and transverse planes. If the landmark or structure was not readily visible in the central 1-voxel-thick sagittal section image, the delineator scrolled through the adjacent six 1-voxel-thick sagittal section images (three 1-voxel-thick sections in front of the central section, and three behind) to locate a section in which the landmark could be clearly identified and marked. The 3-D Cartesian coordinates for each mark were saved and were edited later by either deletion or adjustment of location.
Delineation of the 13 landmark surfaces, boundaries, and points within the 40 radial, digital, sagittal slices of each 3-D ONH reconstruction generated a 3-D point cloud that included each of the marked structures (Fig. 1F) . Each point cloud contained the precise mathematical location of an anatomic surface (e.g., the anterior surface of the sclera), an opening in the neural canal (e.g., BMO), or concentric feature in the ONH or peripapillary sclera (e.g., ASAS). Entire mark sets could be visualized and edited by individual surface, boundary, or neural canal landmark identifiers, either during initial marking or on later inspection.
Clinical Alignment and Visualization of Neural Canal Landmark and Overlay Maps
For this study, only data from the six neural canal landmark points were assessed (Figs. 1E 1J 2) . To establish the clinical orientation of each 3-D ONH reconstruction, a high-resolution 3-D reconstruction of the central retinal vessels and the neural canal landmark points was constructed and three dimensionally overlaid onto a clinical fundus photograph or CSLT image (Fig. 2) . By adjusting the 3-D orientation of the vesselmarks complex, the two were best matched to the clinical image, establishing the rotation angle necessary to achieve true anatomic orientation of the 3-D marks.
Neural canal landmarks for each eye of each monkey were visualized relative to the central retinal vessels and a clinical image, as seen in Figure 2 . Neural canal landmark overlay maps for each monkey were created by digitally converting the left eye data to right eye configuration and overlaying the left eye onto the right eye data for comparison (Fig. 2 , right).
BMO Zero Reference Plane and Neural Canal Landmark Offset and Depth Quantification
For each 3-D ONH reconstruction, a least-squares ellipse was fitted to the 80 marks defining BMO, creating a BMO zero reference plane (Fig. 1K 1L) . The centroid of the BMO ellipse established the center point for all measurements. All subsequent measurements were made relative to the BMO zero reference plane, the BMO centroid, and the normal vector to the BMO zero reference plane at the BMO centroid (BMO normal vector).
For each landmark, its concentric ring of 80 landmark points (2 for each of the 40 radial sagittal slices) was projected onto the BMO zero reference plane along the BMO normal vector. Two parameters were defined for each landmark point and structure (Fig. 1K) : (1) depth: the anterior-to-posterior distance of each marked point to the BMO zero reference plane; and (2) offset: the distance (within the BMO zero reference plane) of each projected mark from the BMO centroid.
Regionalization
Offset and depth data for each neural canal landmark were pooled for eight anatomic regions, superior (S), superonasal (SN), nasal (N), inferonasal (IN), inferior (I), inferotemporal (IT), temporal (T), and superotemporal (ST), according to the previously established clinical orientation (Fig. 2) . The S, N, I, and T regions contained all marks within 60° sections of the ONH centered about the S-I and N-T clinical axes, and the SN, IN, IT, and ST regions contained all marks in 30° radial sections of the ONH centered about the SN-IT and IN-ST axes.
Interdelineator Variability and Intradelineator Reproducibility
Interdelineator variability was assessed by having five delineators distinguish the landmark points of both eyes of all the three monkeys. Intradelineator reproducibility was assessed by having two of the five delineators distinguish all landmarks of both eyes of monkey 3 two additional times at least 2 weeks apart. The effect of delineator (overall and within each monkey) and delineation day (for two delineators on monkey 3 only), were assessed within separate factorial analyses of variance (ANOVA).
Statistical Analysis
A factorial ANOVA was used to assess the effects of delineator, region, and treatment group (normal or EG) on the parameters offset of BMO, and offset and depth of ASCO, ALI, PLI, PSCO, and ASAS, both overall and between the two eyes of each monkey.
| Results |
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Experimental Glaucoma
Monkeys 2 and 3 were killed three weeks and monkey 1 six weeks after the onset of CSLT detection of ONH surface change (permanent posterior deformation of the ONH surface). In monkeys 1 and 2, IOP elevations were moderate, with only one measurement higher than 30 mm Hg. In monkey 3, elevated IOP was not detected (Table 1 , Fig. 1 of our previous publication2 ), but there was clear onset of experimental glaucoma as determined by CSLT-based ONH surface compliance testing.
Qualitative Size and Shape of BMO and the Neural Canal
The size and shape of the neural canal of both the normal and EG eyes of each monkey are represented in Figure 2 . In each eye, BMO overlaid the clinically visible optic disc margin. While the two eyes of each monkey demonstrated marked similarity in size, shape, enlargement (the degree to which the PSCO was larger than BMO) and obliqueness (the degree to which the PSCO was off-center relative to BMO), there were clear qualitative differences in neural canal architecture between the three animals (Fig. 2) , with monkeys 1 and 3 demonstrating substantial enlargement and obliqueness relative to monkey 2.
Neural canal landmark overlay maps demonstrated the relative change in size and shape of each component of the neural canal architecture in the EG eye (solid lines) compared to the contralateral normal control eye (dotted lines) of each monkey (Fig. 2) . Whereas profound expansion of the posterior neural canal landmarks was regionally apparent in the EG eyes of monkeys 1 and 3, only minimal changes were present within the EG eye of monkey 2.
Overall and Intramonkey Treatment Effects on Each Parameter: ANOVA Results
Overall Offset.
Table 1 shows the change in offset (expansion within the plane of BMO) of the pooled EG eyes (
EG) compared with the pooled normal eyes for all five delineators. All five delineators detected similar overall expansions in all the neural canal structures due to early glaucoma, with the more posterior structures (PLI, PSCO, and ASAS) showing statistically significant early glaucomatous expansion (P < 0.05). Note that since the structural offset is measured radially from the centroid of BMO, the values in Table 1 are indicative of only half of the total change in structural diameter.
Overall Offset within Monkeys.
Offset overlay maps are presented for each monkey in Figure 2 . Statistically significant differences in overall offset for all three monkeys are reported in Table 2 for delineator 1 (JCD). Monkey 1 demonstrated statistically significant expansion of all five neural canal structures in the EG eye, whereas monkeys 2 and 3 showed significant expansion in the three posterior-most structures only (P < 0.05). Several neural canal landmarks in monkey 1 approach an average diameter increase of 10% due to EG.
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Regional Offset by Monkey.
Statistically significant regional offset for each individual monkey is presented in Figure 3 , left, for delineator 1 (similar results were obtained for the other four delineators). Although all three animals demonstrated significant regional expansion of the neural canal in the EG eye, there was no consistent pattern. Significant regional changes seemed to occur in the more posterior structures (PLI, PSCO, and ASAS) as is reflected in the overall results (Table 1) .
Overall Depth.
Table 3 shows the change in depth (anterior-to-posterior canal elongation perpendicular to the plane of BMO) of the pooled EG eyes compared with the pooled normal eyes for all five delineators. Although there are small differences, all five delineators detected a similar pattern of posterior elongation of the posterior neural canal landmarks within the EG eyes that are smaller than the offset changes reported in Table 1 . Small posterior or anterior changes in the anterior subarachnoid space were present but achieved statistical significance for only two of the five delineators.
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Overall Regional Depth by Monkey.
Statistically significant regional depth for each monkey is presented in Figure 3 , right, for delineator 1 (similar results were obtained for the other four delineators). Although all three animals demonstrated significant regional expansion of the neural canal in the EG eye, there was no consistent pattern. Regional depth changes occurred in the anterior and posterior laminar insertion points (ALI, PLI) of two of the three EG eyes and all three EG eyes demonstrated anteriorization of some portion of the ASAS.
Interdelineator Variability
The effect of delineator for both offset and depth data were analyzed overall and for each monkey by ANOVA. Although the effect of delineator within the overall data was not significant for offset (P = 0.077), it was for depth (P < 0.001). The delineator was significant (P < 0.001) for both depth and offset in all three monkeys when considered individually; however, their effect compared with the treatment effect was small for offset and modest for depth. Tables 1 and 3 show the overall differences in offset and depth, respectively, for each landmark for all five delineators. Generally, offsets and depths were similar among delineators (Tables 1 3) . Despite statistically significant interdelineator variability, all delineators consistently detected overall glaucomatous expansion of the neural canal (Table 1) . The delineators were less consistent in detecting the glaucomatous posteriorization of the neural canal landmarks (Table 3) and anteriorization of the ASAS (Table 3) because these changes were of smaller magnitude.
Intradelineator Repeatability
The reproducibility of two delineators marking both eyes of monkey 3 on three different days at least 2 weeks apart was assessed by ANOVA and is presented for both offset and depth in Tables 5 and 6 , respectively. The effects of delineator and delineation day were statistically significant for both depth and offset (ANOVA, P < 0.01). However, the data in Tables 5 and 6 demonstrate that the offset and depth differences attributable to delineator and day are smaller than the differences due to treatment, and both the normal eye data and the treatment effects are remarkably repeatable within the three delineation days and between the two delineators.
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| Discussion |
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In this report, we introduce a new method for 3-D delineation and quantification of ONH and peripapillary scleral architecture within color-mapped 3-D ONH reconstructions from both eyes of the three monkeys with experimental glaucoma in one eye. We used the 3-Ddelineated marks to characterize quantitatively the neural canal architecture and its relationship to the anterior-most aspect of the subarachnoid space and to assess rigorously both the interdelineator variability and repeatability of the method.
Our method of 3-D reconstruction, delineation, and quantification of ONH and peripapillary scleral landmark points is reproducible for the neural canal landmarks reported herein. Generally, the absolute offset and depth values as well as the magnitude of the EG treatment effects (both overall and for each monkey) were similar among delineators. Two delineators consistently detected similar levels of difference in the EG versus normal eye of one monkey within delineations made on three different days. However, both interdelineator variability and intradelineator reproducibility was better for offset than depth. Two factors may contribute to this difference. First, the canal depth is much smaller than its radius, and so small differences in landmark point locations have bigger impact in the depth measures. Second, treatment differences in offset were larger than in depth, the implications of which are now discussed.
The principal findings of this report are as follows. First, the clinical alignment of each reconstruction according to the vessels and neural canal architectural landmarks suggests that BMO was the clinically visible optic disc margin in these six eyes. This finding is contrary to the existing literature22 61 62 63 and may pertain only to these animals. We will confirm these findings in a larger group of monkey eyes in a future report.
In their classic text, Hogan et al.62 suggested that, although Bruchs membrane can overhang the anterior scleral canal opening, it is not usually visible alone or when covered with retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). They reported that the scleral lip (border tissues of Elschnig22 64 ; Fig. 1 ) is the clinically visible optic disc margin in human eyes and visible portions of the scleral lip and sclera covered by either RPE or choroid underlie nonpigmented (scleral) and pigmented (RPE or choroidal) peripapillary crescents. Fantes and Anderson61 reached similar conclusions in a group of 12 human cadaveric eyes with intraocular tumors that were photographed before enucleation and then studied histologically.
In our young adult monkey eyes, the connective tissues of the choroidal border zone (the border tissues of Elschnig22 64 ) are robust and rise up to fuse with Bruchs membrane, which continues as a cantilevered connective tissue flange of variable length to its end (BMO; Figs. 1 4 ). Figure 4 unequivocally demonstrates that when our 3-D reconstructions are aligned with high-resolution optic disc photographs (only available for monkey 3), BMO is the clinically visible optic disc margin. While only definitive for this eye, the implications of this finding are important. In most monkey eyes, BMO is both clearly present clinically and easily delineated within histologic reconstructions. If it can also be detected within high-resolution, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans,7 9 12 65 66 then a BMO-based, zero-reference plane for clinical imaging of the ONH may be possible. More extensive histologic and 3-D histomorphometric evidence of the relationship between BMO and the clinically visible optic disc margin is being generated in a large group of normal monkey eyes and will be the subject of a future report.
Second, BMO, the internal entrance to the neural canal,2 does not necessarily reflect the size, shape, and relative position of the external neural canal PSCO), and the degree to which this is true is highly variable among normal monkey eyes (Figs. 2 5) . Two features of the neural canal separately contribute to the architecture of the canal wall, which may influence ONH susceptibility4 : (1) neural canal enlargement (the degree to which the optic nerve increases in size within the neural canal), defined as the difference in size between the external (PSCO) and internal (BMO) neural canal opening; and (2) canal obliqueness (the angle and direction of the canals passage through the sclera), which can be defined by the transverse shift of the external relative to the internal neural canal opening.
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The neural canal area enlarged 163%, 53%, and 100% in the normal eyes of monkeys 1, 2, and 3, respectively, within the data from delineator 1 (Table 7) , and these values are similar for all five delineators.
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Neural canal obliqueness may affect ONH susceptibility in two ways: First, the greater the obliqueness of the canal, the more severe a turn the retinal ganglion cell axons must make to enter the neural canal from the peripapillary nerve fiber layer (Fig. 5) .29 If canal obliqueness is zero, then the axons must only turn 90° on their path from the retina through the neural canal and into the orbital optic nerve. However, when canal obliqueness is substantial, as is the case in monkeys 1 and 3, the axonal path around BMO for a subset of axons is much more tortuous, which has been shown to influence axonal transport.29
Second, the obliqueness of the canal wall determines the shape of the scleral flange which is a connective tissue cantilever of highly variable geometry extending from the PSCO to BMO consisting of the border tissues of Elschnig (between BMO and ASCO) and a scleral (between ASCO and PSCO) component (Fig. 5) . The peripapillary sclera has been shown to be the site of substantial stress and strain concentration within initial finite element models of the human15 17 and monkey ONH.14 These tissues are also the path by which the communicating branches of the posterior ciliary arteries achieve the lamina cribrosa beams, the circle of Zinn-Haler and the immediate retrolaminar optic nerve.67 The contributions of variation in neural canal architecture within normal monkey eyes to their susceptibility to glaucomatous damage remain to be determined.
Permanent changes in neural canal and subarachnoid space architecture are present at the earliest detectable stage of experimental glaucoma in the young adult monkey eye. We believe these changes are permanent and irreversible because (1) each animal had IOP lowered to 10 mm Hg in both eyes for at least 30 minutes before perfusion fixation; and (2) pressure elevations in the glaucomatous eye of the two monkeys on which it was checked were not that high immediately before anterior chamber manometer insertion (37 mm Hg in monkey 2 and 18 mm Hg in monkey 3). Although the magnitude of posterior change we report may have been less had we allowed more time for the tissues to equilibrate at an IOP of 10 mm Hg before perfusion, in a previous study, only minimal levels of anterior ONH surface movement were detected 45 minutes after IOP lowering in early glaucoma eyes.68 We believe that permanent change similar to the magnitude we report would be present in these eyes, regardless of equilibration time.
All neural canal landmarks demonstrated at least regional radial expansion in the EG eyes, which was greatest within the external portions of the canal (the PLI and PSCO). However, the size of Bruchs membrane opening, which is used by all imaging devices for both longitudinal image registration and for parameter generation, was also significantly increased in the EG eye of one monkey. Although there was significant glaucomatous expansion of the canal within each monkey (Fig. 3) , the regional pattern of radial expansion was not consistent in all 3 EG eyes.
All neural canal landmarks demonstrated posterior migration relative to BMO (axial elongation of the canal), with significant displacement of PLI overall and both PLI and ALI in two of three monkeys. The PSCO was significantly posteriorly displaced in the EG eye of one monkey. Regional glaucomatous canal elongation was present within each monkey (Fig. 3) , but again with no pattern consistent in all three EG eyes.
Finally, the anterior subarachnoid space expanded radially in the EG eyes both overall and in all three monkeys. However, rather than demonstrating posterior migration, the subarachnoid space moved anteriorly both overall and in two of three EG eyes. Regional anteriorization of the subarachnoid space was present within the same two monkeys that demonstrated focal regional expansion (Fig. 3) .
This anteriorization and/or expansion of the anterior-most aspect of the subarachnoid space may represent peripapillary scleral thinning immediately adjacent to the canal, which suggests that peripapillary scleral damage may be present very early in the neuropathy. Quantitative overlay maps of peripapillary scleral thickness and position in these same three monkeys will be the subject of a future report.
Radial expansion and axial elongation of neural canal landmarks probably represent the initial connective tissue components of clinical excavation. This excavation is composed of three connective tissue components: (1) radial expansion of the neural canal relative to BMO; (2) posteriorization of the anterior laminar insertion site (ALI) resulting from either axial elongation of the canal or physical disruption of the anterior-most laminar beams; and (3) posterior deformation of the peripheral lamina cribrosa surface (relative to BMO). In this study, we have established that two of these phenomenon are present, at least regionally, in all three EG eyes. Clinically oriented lamina cribrosa position and thickness overlay maps for each EG monkey will be included in our next report and will allow us to test the hypothesis that peripheral laminar deformation and thinning colocalizes with neural canal radial expansion in these same EG eyes.
Although several researchers have reported that glaucomatous eyes measured clinically69 70 71 and after death37 72 do not have larger canal diameters, radial expansion of the neural canal in glaucoma has been reported previously in a series of reports either identified as such73 74 75 76 or in the larger context of glaucomatous excavation.28 31 While not specifically noted, enlargement of the clinically visible optic disc margin is clearly evident within the glaucomatous eye of a series of patients with unilateral glaucomatous damage.63 It was also present within two separate descriptions of the rat glaucoma model.6 77 The importance of our current report is that it documents the presence of neural canal expansion very early in the neuropathy in young adult monkey eyes exposed to only moderate IOP elevations. The presence of glaucomatous canal wall deformation in elderly monkeys and humans, in whom the connective tissues are likely to be more robust, remains to be determined.
A predictable pattern of axonal loss underlies glaucomatous visual field loss with the early changes traditionally ascribed to the superior and inferior poles of the ONH.28 35 It should be noted that in these three EG eyes, early neural canal connective tissue deformations are not consistently localized to the superior and inferior quadrants in the EG eyes of monkeys 2 and 3 (Fig. 3) . A definitive study colocalizing alterations in the ONH and peripapillary retinal surface, prelaminar neural tissue thickness, and lamina cribrosa position and thickness with orbital optic nerve axonal loss in these three EG eyes will be the subject of a future report.
The limitations of our method of 3-D reconstruction have been discussed2 and include: (1) Anterior-to-posterior resolution is limited to 3 µm by the fact that the current stain penetrates approximately 2.5 µm into the block; (2) the stain is applied by hand to the block face with a cotton-tipped swab, and the excess is manually removed with lens paper, and thus staining variation between section images can be substantial; (3) there are tissue shrinkage effects (both from fixation and embedding) associated with this technique, but since all eyes were treated identically, comparisons between the two eyes of each monkey and within treatment groups should be valid; and (4) we have not yet characterized physiologic, intereye differences for these parameters.
In addition, although all future monkey eye reconstructions will be aligned to clinical photos, clinical alignment of the 3-D reconstruction for these three monkeys was performed with pseudocolored CSLT images, which may not provide as clear an image of the clinical optic disc margin. However, in a subsequent alignment of both eyes of monkey 3 to clinical photographs (the only animal for which they were available; Fig. 4 ), no substantial shift in alignment over that achieved with CSLT images was required.
Although the treatment effects reported herein are consistent overall and within each of the three monkeys, we cannot say with certainty that the differences in the EG eyes are treatment effects that exceed physiologic differences between the two normal eyes of a normal monkey. Both ONHs of five, bilaterally normal adult monkeys (perfusion fixed with both eyes set to an IOP of 10 mm Hg by manometer) are currently awaiting 3-D reconstruction and will be the subject of a future report.
Continuum and microfinite element models of each eye, which are derived from the 3-D landmark point-clouds described earlier, are currently under construction. These models will characterize the magnitude and distribution of IOP-related stress and strain within the connective tissues of each 3-Dreconstructed ONH. This characterization will allow us to establish the relationships between IOP-related stress and strain, ONH anatomy, and EG connective tissue damage. These relationships, once elucidated, will provide valuable insight into the biomechanical factors that contribute to individual ONH susceptibility to glaucomatous damage.
Finally, we propose that visualization of the neural canal landmarks described in this report should become an important goal of clinical glaucoma imaging for the following reasons. First, in assessing the susceptibility of an individual ONH to a given level of IOP, the 3-D architecture of the entire canal and peripapillary sclera are likely to be more important than the clinically visible size and shape of the optic disc margin (BMO). Second, clinically detectable deformation of the neural canal wall structures (subsurface structural change) may precede early surface-detected structural and functional change. Third, peripapillary pigment atrophy78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 may be a surface manifestation of underlying neural canal architecture in both normal and glaucomatous eyes sharing etiologic links that have not been appreciated previously.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported in part by National Eye Institute Grants R01EY011610 (CFB), K23EY13959 (CAG), and P30EY002377 (HWT) (departmental core grant), Bethesda, Maryland; a grant from the American Health Assistance Foundation, Rockville, Maryland (CFB); a grant from The Whitaker Foundation, Arlington, Virginia (CFB); a grant from the Eyesight Foundation of Alabama (CAG); a Career Development Award (CFB), a Physician-Scientist award (CAG) and an unrestricted departmental grant (LSU Eye Center) from Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc.
Submitted for publication January 8, 2007; revised February 8, 2007; accepted May 15, 2007.
Disclosure: J.C. Downs, None; H. Yang, None; C. Girkin, None; L. Sakata, None; A. Bellezza, None; H. Thompson, None; C.F. Burgoyne, None
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Claude F. Burgoyne, Optic Nerve Head Biomechanics Laboratory, Devers Eye Institute, 1225 NE 2nd Avenue, PO Box 3950, Portland OR 97208-3950; cfburgoyne{at}deverseye.org.
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R. Ren, N. Wang, B. Li, L. Li, F. Gao, X. Xu, and J. B. Jonas Lamina Cribrosa and Peripapillary Sclera Histomorphometry in Normal and Advanced Glaucomatous Chinese Eyes with Various Axial Length Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., May 1, 2009; 50(5): 2175 - 2184. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. G. Strouthidis, H. Yang, J. C. Downs, and C. F. Burgoyne Comparison of Clinical and Three-Dimensional Histomorphometric Optic Disc Margin Anatomy Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., May 1, 2009; 50(5): 2165 - 2174. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. L. Thornton, W. J. Dupps, A. S. Roy, and R. R. Krueger Biomechanical Effects of Intraocular Pressure Elevation on Optic Nerve/Lamina Cribrosa before and after Peripapillary Scleral Collagen Cross-Linking Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., March 1, 2009; 50(3): 1227 - 1233. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. D. Roberts, V. Grau, J. Grimm, J. Reynaud, A. J. Bellezza, C. F. Burgoyne, and J. C. Downs Remodeling of the Connective Tissue Microarchitecture of the Lamina Cribrosa in Early Experimental Glaucoma Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., February 1, 2009; 50(2): 681 - 690. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. G. Strouthidis, H. Yang, B. Fortune, J. C. Downs, and C. F. Burgoyne Detection of Optic Nerve Head Neural Canal Opening within Histomorphometric and Spectral Domain Optical Coherence Tomography Data Sets Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., January 1, 2009; 50(1): 214 - 223. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. Yang, J. C. Downs, and C. F. Burgoyne Physiologic Intereye Differences in Monkey Optic Nerve Head Architecture and Their Relation to Changes in Early Experimental Glaucoma Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., January 1, 2009; 50(1): 224 - 234. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Hommer, G. Fuchsjager-Mayrl, H. Resch, C. Vass, G. Garhofer, and L. Schmetterer Estimation of Ocular Rigidity Based on Measurement of Pulse Amplitude Using Pneumotonometry and Fundus Pulse Using Laser Interferometry in Glaucoma Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., September 1, 2008; 49(9): 4046 - 4050. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. Yang, J. C. Downs, A. Bellezza, H. Thompson, and C. F. Burgoyne 3-D Histomorphometry of the Normal and Early Glaucomatous Monkey Optic Nerve Head: Prelaminar Neural Tissues and Cupping Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., November 1, 2007; 48(11): 5068 - 5084. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. Yang, J. C. Downs, C. Girkin, L. Sakata, A. Bellezza, H. Thompson, and C. F. Burgoyne 3-D Histomorphometry of the Normal and Early Glaucomatous Monkey Optic Nerve Head: Lamina Cribrosa and Peripapillary Scleral Position and Thickness Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., October 1, 2007; 48(10): 4597 - 4607. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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