Image via New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai on YouTube

NEW YORK—Eye stroke, or central retinal artery occlusion, happens when the main artery that supplies blood to the retina is blocked, typically by a clot, depriving the retina of oxygen. Often categorized by painless, sudden loss of vision in one eye, it is similar to a stroke in the brain and can lead to permanent vision loss if the clot is not dissolved as soon as possible. At New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai (NYEE), though, ophthalmologists have created a novel protocol to rapidly diagnose eye stroke and expedite care to prevent this potentially irreversible vision loss.

Their study was published on Tuesday, February 13, in Ophthalmology, and it describes using high-resolution retinal imaging in the emergency room along with rapid remote consultation to confirm diagnosis and expedite care, improving outcomes. Mount Sinai’s Department of Ophthalmology launched an Eye Stroke Service and developed a treatment protocol for patients.

Under this protocol, high-tech eye imaging devices using optical coherence tomography (OCT) were placed in three hospitals within the Mount Sinai Health System that have large emergency rooms and stroke teams. OCT diagnostic imaging, pioneered at NYEE, is a non-invasive way to detect microscopic changes in the retina within minutes of a blockage, enabling rapid diagnosis for accurate treatment.

 
 Richard B. Rosen, MD. Image courtesy of New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai
When a patient arrives at the emergency room with a possible eye stroke, the stroke service is urgently called to evaluate the patient and do the scan. They electronically send the images to remote on-call retinal specialists who can make an instant diagnosis. If the retinal specialists confirm an eye stroke diagnosis, the vascular interventional neuroradiologists can dissolve the clot with an infusion of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)—a clot-dissolving drug—into the blocked ophthalmic artery.

Corresponding author Richard B. Rosen, MD, chief of the Retina Service for the Mount Sinai Health System, said in an announcement, “The protocol implements highly sensitive retinal imaging at the patient’s point of entry into the medical system, reducing the need for onsite ophthalmology consults, which are often not immediately available.

“Seamless cooperation and coordination between the subspecialty teams of stroke neurologists, retinal specialists, and interventional radiologists is the key to rapid triage of these emergency patients. This model can easily be implemented anywhere in the country where a stroke team is available. The semi-automated OCT camera and remote consult team can expedite diagnosis for these time-sensitive eye emergencies,” Dr. Rosen said.



Researchers analyzed 59 patients who went through the protocol on the Eye Stroke Service during the first 18 months since it launched. The average time to treatment after the patients arrived at the hospital was roughly two and a half hours, and patients were treated, on average, about nine hours from the onset of symptoms, which included the time the patients took to come to the hospital.


Twenty-five patients (42 percent) had a confirmed eye stroke based on OCT imaging and follow-up examination. Ten patients were eligible for treatment and nine received treatment with intra-arterial tPA. There was a statistically significant improvement in their visual acuity four weeks after treatment.

Researchers noted a dramatic improvement in 66 percent of these patients within 24 hours of treatment, with 56 percent of treated patients maintaining improved vision one month following the procedure. On average, the patients’ vision improved dramatically—from “counts fingers” (but not able to read the eye chart) to 20/100. Most notably, four patients (44 percent of those treated with tPA) improved to 20/40 or better, which constitutes unrestricted driving vision in New York State.

 
 Gareth Lema, MD, PhD. Image courtesy of New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai
Up next, the Mount Sinai researchers will expand the availability of OCT cameras in more Mount Sinai Health System emergency rooms and increase outreach to the medical community and the general public. Their goal is for people to better understand symptoms of eye stroke and the importance of getting immediate medical attention, and recognize the potential for treatment to preserve vision with a timely referral.

Gareth Lema, MD, PhD, lead author of the study and vice chair of Quality, Safety, and Experience at NYEE, said in an announcement, “We reported a novel protocol for the diagnosis of eye strokes that not only can save vision for these patients, but also demonstrates the potential to use remote consultation for time-sensitive ophthalmic emergencies.

“The importance of education among the medical community and the public cannot be stressed enough. Patients with an eye stroke are at risk of also developing a stroke in the brain, and that risk is highest in the first month after diagnosis. If patients get to us in time, we can treat. But even for those who don’t, the systemic workup to identify the source of the stroke might be even more critical,” Dr. Lema said.