Systemic immune-inflammation index (SII) and the speed of RNFL loss
Автор: Glaucoma, Vision & Longevity: Supplements Science
Загружено: 2026-01-18
Просмотров: 4
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Excerpt:
Introduction: Glaucoma is an eye disease that slowly damages the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) – the bundle of nerve fibers carrying vision signals from the eye to the brain. Doctors monitor RNFL thickness (and nearby ganglion cell complex (GCC) thickness) over time using imaging scans. Thinning of RNFL or GCC is a warning sign of glaucoma progression. Traditionally, eye pressure and imaging guide treatment. But emerging research suggests even a routine blood test might help predict how fast the optic nerve will thin. () (). A new marker called the Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index (SII) – based on your Complete Blood Count (CBC) – shows promise as an “integrative” inflammation indicator for eye health.What Is the Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index (SII)? The Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index (SII) is a number calculated from a standard blood test. It uses three common measures: platelet count, neutrophil count, and lymphocyte count. The formula is: > SII = (Platelet count × Neutrophil count) / Lymphocyte count ().In other words, multiply your blood platelet number by your neutrophil number, then divide by your lymphocyte number (). All of these values come from the CBC (Complete Blood Count), a test that virtually any doctor can order or that many patients can order directly (see below). Platelets are tiny blood cells that help clot blood. Neutrophils are a type of white blood cell that rises during infection or inflammation. Lymphocytes are another white cell type (including T-cells and B-cells) that fight specific germs. A higher SII generally means more inflammation (high neutrophils or platelets, or low lymphocytes) across the body. (Originally SII was studied in cancer and heart disease, but now ophthalmology researchers are exploring it () ().) Because SII comes straight from routine CBC numbers, it’s an accessible marker. Any adult can get a CBC at most labs (often called “CBC with differential”) and see their platelets, neutrophils, and lymphocytes reported, typically with reference ranges. Then anyone can plug those numbers into the SII formula. Keep in mind the lab’s unit (often thousands of cells per microliter) and use the absolute counts (not percentages) for neutrophils and lymphocytes. For example, if Platelets=250 (×10^3/µL), Neutrophils=4.5 (×10^3/µL), Lymphocytes=1.8 (×10^3/µL), then SII = 250×4.5 / 1.8 ≈ 625. There is no single “normal SII” yet, but researchers have found that glaucoma patients often have much higher SII values than healthy people ().SII and Eye Diseases Research is increasingly linking high SII to eye problems. In glaucoma, one study of 240 open-angle glaucoma patients versus 300 controls found significantly higher SII in the glaucoma group (). In fact, patients with more severe glaucoma had even higher SII. The authors concluded that elevated SII “might serve as a readily available inflammatory predictor” in glaucoma (). Large population surveys also back this up. For example, an analysis of U.S. NHANES survey data showed that as SII levels rise, the prevalence of glaucoma increases in a linear fashion () (). Interestingly, high SII appears linked to other age-related eye diseases too. The same NHANES analyses found SII rose with both glaucoma and cataract risk () (). A recent study re
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