Purpose: To determine whether internal limiting membrane peeling damages retinal function in patients with an idiopathic macular hole.
Methods: Retrospective case series. Forty-five eyes of 45 idiopathic macular hole patients who underwent vitrectomy with internal limiting membrane peeling with a minimum follow-up of 6 months. Each patient received a complete ophthalmological examination. The eyes were examined by microperimetry MP-3 in the central 20° visual field and optical coherence tomography angiography in the central 6 × 6 mm area.
Results: Six months after the surgery, macular hole closed in each patient. Retinal sensitivity decreased significantly in the perifoveal temporal ETDRS sector (from 24.97 ± 2.67-19.98 ± 5.68 dB, P = 0.001) but not in the other sectors. Six patients (13%) developed 24 scotomas, 62.5% presented in the perifoveal temporal sector. Anatomically, bumps in the outer nuclear layer were discovered concurrent with inner retinal dimples on B-scan images, predominantly (76.8%) in the perifoveal temporal sector, which have not been previously reported. The incidence of outer nuclear layer bumps was significantly higher in patients with scotomas than in those without (83% vs. 18%, P = 0.014).
Conclusion: Internal limiting membrane peeling induced functional changes specifically in the perifoveal temporal macula. Distortion in the retinal layers is proposed to underly scotomas pathogenesis.