Optic atrophy is a pathological term referring to optic nerve shrinkage caused by the degeneration of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons. The term “optic atrophy” is regarded as a misnomer since atrophy implies disuse. Therefore, a better term for optic atrophy would be “optic neuropathy.” However, that term is also controversial since, in certain situations, such as primary optic atrophy or traumatic brain injury, optic neuropathy may not occur.[1]
Optic atrophy is the end stage of a disease process affecting the retinogeniculate portion of the visual pathway, characterized by a non-specific sign of optic disc pallor. While the peripheral nervous system has an intrinsic ability for repair and regeneration, the central nervous system, for the most part, is incapable of such processes. The axons of the optic nerve are heavily myelinated by oligodendrocytes and reactive astrocytes, which express many inhibitory factors for axonal regeneration.[2] Thus, the optic nerve, with its 1.2 million fibers, behaves more like a white matter tract rather than a true peripheral nerve. The optic nerve head is supplied by pial capillaries that undergo degeneration contributing to the pallor of the optic disc seen in optic atrophy. It is this neuro-vascular degeneration which forms the foundation for the development of optic atrophy.
When light is thrown on the fundus from a light source, it undergoes total internal reflection through the axonal fibers. Subsequently, reflection from the capillaries on the disc surface gives rise to the characteristic yellow-pink color of a healthy optic disc. In eyes with cataract, red color is exaggerated, giving rise to a hyperemic appearance of the disc. Conversely, in pseudophakic individuals, the disc may appear to have some degree of pallor.
Usually, 4-6 weeks are required following axonal damage for the optic disc pallor to start developing. In severe cases, the disc ultimately becomes chalky white. The overlying axons and capillaries degenerate so that the white lamina cribrosa becomes visible. This contrasts sharply with the surrounding red-colored retina. The exact mechanisms responsible for the optic disc pallor seen in optic atrophy are not clearly elucidated. It is assumed that the loss of axonal fibers along with the rearrangement of astrocytes contributes to the disc pallor. Cogan and Walsh, as well as Hoyt, have mentioned optic disc pallor as a consequence of loss of smaller blood vessels and the variable amount of reactive gliosis and fibrosis, as the optic nerve shrinks due to various factors. The degenerated axons also lose the optical property of total internal reflection, leading to the pale optic disc seen in this condition.[3]
Recognition of optic atrophy might prove to be life-saving for the patient. Therefore, it is imperative to have adequate knowledge regarding this fairly common condition. This review presents the basic concepts of optic atrophy.
The risk factors for the development of optic atrophy have been denoted by the mnemonic: VIN DITTCH MD. This mnemonic denotes the following conditions= V: Vascular; I: Inflammatory and infectious; N: Neoplastic or compressive; D: Primary demyelinating disease or idiopathic optic neuritis; T(2): Toxic and traumatic; C: Congenital; H: Hereditary; M: Metabolic and endocrine causes; D: Degenerative.[4]
A retrospective case series of non-glaucomatous optic atrophy in Malaysia found the main etiologies to be: space-occupying intracranial lesions (26%), congenital/hereditary diseases (13%), hydrocephalus (12%), trauma (12%) and vascular causes (12%).
Optic atrophy can be classified based on the various causes which may lead to this condition. Various conditions in which optic atrophy may occur can be classified as follows:
The prevalence of optic atrophy varies widely. Optic atrophy was one of the five main causes of blindness in prevalence studies from Israel, Japan, Scotland, Zaire, and other countries.[5][6][7][8][9]. In the Oman eye study, 5% of the blindness was attributable to this condition.[10] In a study from Egypt, the age-adjusted blindness prevalence rates per 1000 persons showed that in an urban population, 4.1% of the blindness and in a rural population 1.2% of the blindness was attributable to optic atrophy.[11]
In southern Germany, newly-registered blindness-allowance recipients were analyzed for the causes of blindness. Among the 3531 individuals, the standardized incidence rate per 100,000 person-years for optic atrophy was 2.86 (SD 2.66-3.05).[12] In a study from the Baltimore area of the United States, the prevalence of blindness due to optic atrophy in whites was found to be zero, while it was 1.9% in African-Americans, giving a total prevalence of 0.8% across both groups.[13] In another population-based study from the United States, 0.83% of individuals were found to be bilaterally blind. Of these, optic atrophy was responsible for bilateral blindness in 3 persons.[14]
The optic nerve head represents the distal portion of the optic nerve. It is the point where axons of the RGCs exit out of the eyeball. The arterial supply to this segment of the optic nerve is through a capillary net originating from the retinal arterioles. Due to the presence of the capillary network and total internal reflection of light in the axons, the optic nerve head appears yellow-pink. The degeneration of RGCs, axons, and capillaries leads to the appearance of the pale optic disc seen in optic atrophy.
In optic atrophy, certain histopathological changes can be seen. These include the widening of the pial septa and subarachnoid space with a redundancy of the dura. In case of trauma, the anterior severed ends of the nerve show bulbous swellings known as Cajal end bulbs.
Patients who develop optic atrophy often complain of loss of vision with the segmental or diffuse blurring of the visual field. History should be directed to the suspected cause of visual impairment. Certain important points in history include the nature of the presenting illness; visual and ocular history; family, medical and surgical history; medication and social history; and hospital or institutional admission history. History of systemic infections and diseases such as diabetes and thyroid disorders, dietary disturbances, addictions to alcohol, tobacco or recreational drugs, trauma, and other factors should be elicited.
Optic neuritis is an important cause of optic atrophy. It usually occurs in individuals between 10-50 years of age. Patients typically present with sudden, the usually severe visual loss associated with pain on ocular movements. AION occurs in individuals above 50 years of age with headache and tenderness of the temporal artery. In optic atrophy due to tumors, there is an insidious history of slowly progressive visual impairment. However, hemorrhage within or due to the tumor eroding surrounding vessels would cause a sudden visual loss. Reduced color saturation or contrast sensitivity may develop before the occurrence of defective vision. Red color desaturation is seen in optic neuritis. While defects in identifying blue-yellow color may be an early sign of dominant optic atrophy, the normal linear association between stereoacuity and Snellen visual acuity could also be lost in optic atrophy.
On examining a case of optic atrophy, the observer may notice reduced visual acuity and contrast sensitivity, as well as the presence of a relative afferent pupillary defect (unless the condition is bilateral). Ophthalmoscopic findings vary from a chalky white disc in advanced cases to subtler changes in milder forms. In the latter case, the color of the optic disc in the fellow eye can be compared. Also, the surface capillary net can be examined on high magnification. In optic atrophy, the net is thin or absent, depending upon the stage of the disease. Another early finding, which may occur even before the development of optic disc color changes, is the loss of peripapillary retinal striations. These changes appear first in the superior or inferior arcades, as dark bands, called "rake defects," due to their resemblance to marks in the soil made from rakes.
Optic atrophy can be classified using different parameters. These can be clinical, pathological, and those based upon the extent and etiology.[15]
Clinical Types
Primary optic atrophy occurs without any preceding swelling of the optic nerve head. The condition is caused by lesions in the anterior visual system extending from the RGCs to the lateral geniculate body (LGB). The etiology of primary optic atrophy varies from conditions such as pituitary or optic nerve tumors and aneurysms, hereditary- and traumatic- optic neuropathies, toxic- and nutritional-optic neuropathies, following retrobulbar neuritis to multiple sclerosis. In this condition, the axons degenerate in an orderly manner. Subsequently, the resolution is characterized by the laying down of columns of glial cells.
As mentioned earlier, in primary optic atrophy, there is an orderly degeneration of the nerve fibers. The architecture of the optic nerve head is maintained, and the disc appears pale and chalky-white due to cupping and visibility of the lamina cribrosa. Margins of the disc are sharply defined, parapapillary blood vessels attenuated, and retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thinned out. There is a loss of the overlying capillary net, a clinical feature known as Kestenbaum sign. Normally, the number of capillaries visible on the optic nerve head is 10. However, in OA, the counts may reduce to 6.
Secondary optic atrophy ensues optic disc swelling, such as that seen in papilledema, optic neuritis, or AION. The fibers of the optic nerve exhibit marked degeneration and profuse glial tissue proliferation. The optic nerve head architecture is lost, and disc margins become indistinct. The color of the disc is grey or dirty-grey. In this condition, the lamina cribrosa is not visible due to the filling of the cup by overlying proliferative fibroglial tissue. Hyaline bodies (corpora amylacea) or drusen may occur. Peripapillary sheathing of arteries, tortuous veins, and optociliary shunt vessels may be observed. Peripapillary retinochoroidal folds known as Paton Lines, especially temporal to the disc, may be present. Functional tests demonstrate progressive contraction of visual fields in these cases.
Consecutive optic atrophy is associated with diseases that affect the inner retina or its blood supply. Some of those conditions include retinitis pigmentosa, pathological myopia, following pan-retinal photocoagulation, extensive retinochoroiditis, and central retinal artery occlusion. In this type of optic atrophy, the optic nerve head is waxy pale with a normal disc margin, marked attenuation of arteries, and a normal physiologic cup. Clinical features of predisposing retino-choroidal conditions provide a clue to this type of optic atrophy.
Glaucomatous optic atrophy is a completely distinct entity. It is characterized by certain specific mechanical and vascular changes in the optic disc, such as an increase in the cup: disc ratio and changes in the blood vessels as well as thinning of surrounding RNFL. This type of optic atrophy will not be considered further in this article.
Pathological Types
Ascending optic atrophy is also known as Wallerian degeneration. This anterograde degeneration occurs as a consequence of injury to the retinal elements or ONH axons. The subsequent degeneration ascends towards the LGB and superior colliculus.[2]
Descending optic atrophy or retrograde optic atrophy follows a higher-order lesion leading to neuronal death upstream in the pathway. Occipital lesions have been reported to cause bilateral optic atrophy. However, lesions beyond the LGB are unlikely to cause optic atrophy, since the second-order neurons (RGC axons) synapse in the LGB. More commonly, tumors involving the retrobulbar segments of the optic nerve or the chiasm may cause secondary optic atrophy of the descending type.
Classification based on extent: Optic atrophy can also be classified depending upon the extent of the neural loss.
Partial optic atrophy occurs when there is some preservation of neural elements, and the disc may show only mild changes. Visual acuity may range from moderate visual loss to counting fingers. Visual field analysis usually shows concentric contraction with tubular vision. In such cases, only the temporal side of the disc could be pale and known as temporal pallor. This appearance of the disc indicates atrophy of the papillomacular fibers. It can be seen in traumatic or nutritional optic atrophy and multiple sclerosis patients following optic neuritis. In retrobulbar optic neuritis, the optic disc appearance is normal. In suspicious cases, the disc appearance should not be regarded as normal temporal pallor seen in some healthy discs and investigations performed to rule out any pathology. Another phenomenon is band atrophy or bow-tie atrophy. It is characterized by butterfly-shaped nasal as well as temporal optic disc atrophy. It is seen in lesions of the optic chiasm or optic tract.[16]
Total optic atrophy is characterized by complete loss of the nerve fibers in the optic nerve. In such cases, the optic disc is completely pale, and vision is usually no perception-to-light.
In a case of optic atrophy, a number of investigations can be tailored according to the suspected etiology of the condition.
The ideal treatment for optic atrophy would involve neuroregeneration. Unfortunately, such modalities are still not available for clinical use. Pharmacological treatment for optic atrophy has also been largely ineffective. The only focus in management is treating the exact cause before the development of significant damage to salvage useful vision. Once the condition is stabilized, low vision aids can be tried in selected individuals.
Pulse intravenous methylprednisolone has been used in conditions such as optic neuritis, arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, and traumatic optic neuropathy with successful outcomes. The optic neuritis treatment trial recommended doses of 500-1000 mg/day of IV methylprednisolone for three days, followed by oral prednisolone 1 mg/Kg BW for 11 days. Beta-interferons and glatiramer acetate have been used in the treatment of multiple sclerosis and related optic neuritis to reduce the occurrence of clinical lesions seen on MRI as well as the number of recurrences.[17][18]
Stem cell treatment may prove to be key in the future treatment of neuronal disorders. Neural progenitor cells can be delivered to the vitreous from where they can integrate into the ganglion cell layer of the retina. These cells would turn on neurofilament genes, and migrate into the host optic nerve to stimulate the regeneration of neural elements.[19]
Certain conditions may mimic optic atrophy and have to be ruled out. Some of these conditions include the following:
The visual prognosis in optic atrophy depends upon the extent of axonal loss. In partial optic atrophy, the visual impairment would be mild to moderate. However, in total optic atrophy, the prognosis is poor. Early and intensive treatment in conditions such as optic neuritis, toxic and nutritional situations may lead to nearly complete recovery.
Optic atrophy is not a disease per se; it is a sign indicating several conditions. Therefore, the complications are related to the underlying disease, rather than the optic atrophy itself.
Once the vision is stable, rehabilitative measures can be undertaken in the form of low-vison aids, change in the work environment, occupational rehabilitation, and avoidance of causative factors, which may cause progressive visual deterioration.
Since the cause of optic atrophy is often systemic, relevant consultations should be done. When required, multidisciplinary assessments such as neurology, neuro-surgery, and for infectious diseases can be performed.
The need to maintain a healthy lifestyle should be emphasized to the public. Dietary disturbances and addictions can often lead to optic atrophy and are avoidable. The general public, especially the vulnerable groups, should be educated regarding this aspect. Symptoms of systemic conditions that may indicate the development of optic nerve damage should be explained to patients with those diseases.
As optic atrophy is not a disease but a sign of some other condition, it requires interprofessional communication and a multi-disciplinary approach to this problem. The disease outcome can be enhanced by interacting with physicians to manage conditions such as diabetes and multiple sclerosis and with surgeons when dealing with tumors and space-occupying lesions. Dieticians have to be involved in cases of nutritional anomalies. Optometrists have to play a role in providing visual care and rehabilitation. Similarly, the role of nurses in patient care when individuals have bilateral visual loss or have restricted activities from systemic disease is also of prime importance. Occupational rehabilitation involves employers and social service providers. Overall, efforts should be made to improve the quality of life of the affected individuals.[20]
[1] | Golnik K, Nonglaucomatous optic atrophy. Neurologic clinics. 2010 Aug; [PubMed PMID: 20637993] |
[2] | Li HJ,Sun ZL,Yang XT,Zhu L,Feng DF, Exploring Optic Nerve Axon Regeneration. Current neuropharmacology. 2017; [PubMed PMID: 28029073] |
[3] | Quigley HA,Anderson DR, The histologic basis of optic disk pallor in experimental optic atrophy. American journal of ophthalmology. 1977 May; [PubMed PMID: 405870] |
[4] | Newman NJ, Optic disc pallor: a false localizing sign. Survey of ophthalmology. 1993 Jan-Feb; [PubMed PMID: 8441953] |
[5] | Farber MD, National Registry for the Blind in Israel: estimation of prevalence and incidence rates and causes of blindness. Ophthalmic epidemiology. 2003 Oct; [PubMed PMID: 14628969] |
[6] | Bamashmus MA,Matlhaga B,Dutton GN, Causes of blindness and visual impairment in the West of Scotland. Eye (London, England). 2004 Mar; [PubMed PMID: 15004574] |
[7] | Iwase A,Araie M,Tomidokoro A,Yamamoto T,Shimizu H,Kitazawa Y, Prevalence and causes of low vision and blindness in a Japanese adult population: the Tajimi Study. Ophthalmology. 2006 Aug; [PubMed PMID: 16877074] |
[8] | Kayembe L, Common causes of blindness in Zaïre. The British journal of ophthalmology. 1985 May; [PubMed PMID: 3994957] |
[9] | Mbekeani JN,Fattah MA,Poulsen DM,Hazzaa SA,Dababo MA,Eldali A,Ahmed M, Etiology of optic atrophy: a prospective observational study from Saudi Arabia. Annals of Saudi medicine. 2017 May-Jun; [PubMed PMID: 28578363] |
[10] | Khandekar R,Mohammed AJ,Negrel AD,Riyami AA, The prevalence and causes of blindness in the Sultanate of Oman: the Oman Eye Study (OES). The British journal of ophthalmology. 2002 Sep; [PubMed PMID: 12185115] |
[11] | Said ME,Goldstein H,Korra A,El-Kashlan K, Prevalence and causes of blindness in urban and rural areas of Egypt. Public health reports (Washington, D.C. : 1896). 1970 Jul; [PubMed PMID: 4987473] |
[12] | Trautner C,Haastert B,Richter B,Berger M,Giani G, Incidence of blindness in southern Germany due to glaucoma and degenerative conditions. Investigative ophthalmology [PubMed PMID: 12601025] |
[13] | Tielsch JM,Javitt JC,Coleman A,Katz J,Sommer A, The prevalence of blindness and visual impairment among nursing home residents in Baltimore. The New England journal of medicine. 1995 May 4; [PubMed PMID: 7700315] |
[14] | Muñoz B,West SK,Rubin GS,Schein OD,Quigley HA,Bressler SB,Bandeen-Roche K, Causes of blindness and visual impairment in a population of older Americans: The Salisbury Eye Evaluation Study. Archives of ophthalmology (Chicago, Ill. : 1960). 2000 Jun; [PubMed PMID: 10865321] |
[15] | ROSE FC, OPTIC ATROPHY. Postgraduate medical journal. 1964 Dec; [PubMed PMID: 14227661] |
[16] | Gálvez-Ruiz A,Arishi N, Band atrophy of the optic nerve: A report on different anatomical locations in three patients. Saudi journal of ophthalmology : official journal of the Saudi Ophthalmological Society. 2013 Jan; [PubMed PMID: 23964192] |
[17] | Gal RL,Vedula SS,Beck R, Corticosteroids for treating optic neuritis. The Cochrane database of systematic reviews. 2015 Aug 14; [PubMed PMID: 26273799] |
[18] | Wilhelm H,Schabet M, The Diagnosis and Treatment of Optic Neuritis. Deutsches Arzteblatt international. 2015 Sep 11; [PubMed PMID: 26396053] |
[19] | Weiss JN,Levy S,Malkin A, Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study (SCOTS) for retinal and optic nerve diseases: a preliminary report. Neural regeneration research. 2015 Jun; [PubMed PMID: 26199618] |
[20] | Trauzettel-Klosinski S, Current methods of visual rehabilitation. Deutsches Arzteblatt international. 2011 Dec; [PubMed PMID: 22259642] |