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Is retinal assessment useful in epileptic patients with hyperhomocysteinemia?

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Is retinal assessment useful in epileptic patients with hyperhomocysteinemia?

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PURPOSE: The arteriole-to-venule ratio (AVR) is widely used for investigating subclinical cerebral microangiopathy. The possible occurrence of retinal vascular caliber changes was investigated in a population of hyperhomocysteinaemic (plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) >13 micromol/l) adult epileptic patients. METHODS: Retinal photographs of cases and controls were evaluated for generalized narrowing of the retinal arterioles, measured as AVR, by graders masked to case-control status using standardized protocols. Plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) levels were assayed by HPLC. RESULTS: Sixty-seven patients (36M/31F, 36.4+/-7.5 years of age; mean level of tHcy 22.8+/-11.4 micromol/l), and 75 control subjects (42M/33F, 35.4+/-8.5 years of age; mean level of tHcy 7.8+/-2.3 micromol/l) were enroled. No retinal caliber changes were detected in any patient and healthy subject. The analysis of retinal photographs failed to identify any difference in the venular diameters, arteriolar diameters, and

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