54 research outputs found
Screening for Glaucomatous Visual Field Defects in Rural Australia with an iPad
Aim and objective: Developing improved methods for early detection of visual field defects is pivotal to reducing glaucoma-related vision loss. The Melbourne Rapid Fields screening module (MRF-S) is an iPad-based test, which allows suprathreshold screening with zone-based analysis to rapidly assess the risk of manifest glaucoma. The versatility of MRF-S has potential utility in rural areas and during infectious pandemics. This study evaluates the utility of MRF-S for detecting field defects in non-metropolitan settings. Materials and methods: This was a prospective, multicenter, cross-sectional validation study. Two hundred and fifty-two eyes of 142 participants were recruited from rural sites through two outreach eye services in Australia. Participants were tested using MRF-S and compared with a reference standard; either Zeiss Humphrey Field Analyzer or Haag-Streit Octopus performed at the same visit. Standardized questionnaires were used to assess user acceptability. Major outcome measures were the area under the curve (AUC) for detecting mild and moderate field defects defined by the reference tests, along with corresponding performance characteristics (sensitivity, specificity). Results: The mean test duration for MRF-S was 1.88 minutes compared with 5.92 minutes for reference tests. The AUCs for mild and moderate field defects were 0.81 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.75–0.87] and 0.87 (95% CI: 0.83–0.92), respectively, indicating very good diagnostic accuracy. Using a risk criterion of 55%, MRF-S identified moderate field defects with a sensitivity and specificity of 88.4 and 81.0%, respectively. Conclusion and clinical significance: The MRF-S iPad module can identify patients with mild and moderate field defects while delivering favorable user acceptability and short test duration. This has potential application within rural locations and amidst infectious pandemics
Genetic Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Is Associated with Macular Ganglion Cell–Inner Plexiform Layer Thinning in an Early Glaucoma Cohort
Purpose: To evaluate the association between genetic risk for cardiovascular disease and retinal thinning in early glaucoma. Design: Prospective, observational genetic association study Participants: Multicohort study combining a cohort of patients with suspect and early manifest primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), a cohort of patients with perimetric POAG, and an external normative control cohort. Methods: A cardiovascular disease genetic risk score was calculated for 828 participants from the Progression Risk of Glaucoma: Relevant SNPs [single nucleotide polymorphisms] with Significant Association (PROGRESSA) study. Participants were characterized as showing either predominantly macular ganglion cell–inner plexiform layer (GCIPL), predominantly peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRNFL) or equivalent macular GCIPL and pRNFL spectral-domain OCT thinning. The cardiovascular disease genetic risk scores for these groups were compared to an internal reference group of stable suspected glaucoma and of an external normative population. Replication was undertaken by comparing the phenotypes of participants from the Australia New Zealand Registry of Advanced Glaucoma (ANZRAG) with the normative control group. Main Outcome Measures: Spectral-domain OCT and Humphrey Visual Field (HVF) change. Results: After accounting for age, sex, and intraocular pressure (IOP), participants with predominantly macular GCIPL thinning showed a higher cardiovascular disease genetic risk score than reference participants (odds ratio [OR], 1.76/standard deviation [SD]; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.18–2.62; P = 0.005) and than normative participants (OR, 1.32/SD; 95% CI, 1.12–1.54; P = 0.002). This finding was replicated by comparing ANZRAG participants with predominantly macular GCIPL change with the normative population (OR, 1.39/SD; 95% CI, 1.05–1.83; P = 0.022). Review of HVF data identified that participants with paracentral visual field defects also demonstrated a higher cardiovascular disease genetic risk score than reference participants (OR, 1.85/SD; 95% CI, 1.16–2.97; P = 0.010). Participants with predominantly macular GCIPL thinning exhibited a higher vertical cup-to-disc ratio genetic risk score (OR, 1.48/SD; 95% CI, 1.24–1.76; P < 0.001), but an IOP genetic risk score (OR, 1.12/SD; 95% CI, 0.95–1.33; P = 0.179) comparable with that of the normative population. Conclusions: This study highlighted the relationship between cardiovascular disease and retinal thinning in suspect and manifest glaucoma cases
Physical Activity Is Associated With Macular Thickness: A Multi-Cohort Observational Study
PURPOSE. To assess the association between physical activity and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT)–measured rates of macular thinning in an adult population with primary open-angle glaucoma. METHODS. The correlation between accelerometer-measured physical activity and rates of macular ganglion cell–inner plexiform layer (GCIPL) thinning was measured in 735 eyes from 388 participants of the Progression Risk of Glaucoma: RElevant SNPs with Significant Association (PROGRESSA) study. The association between accelerometer-measured physical activity and cross-sectional SD-OCT macular thickness was then assessed in 8862 eyes from 6152 participants available for analysis in the UK Biobank who had SD-OCT, ophthalmic, comorbidity, and demographic data. RESULTS. Greater physical activity was associated with slower rates of macular GCIPL thinning in the PROGRESSA study (beta = 0.07 μm/y/SD; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.03–0.13; P = 0.003) after adjustment for ophthalmic, demographic and systemic predictors of macular thinning. This association persisted in subanalyses of participants characterized as glaucoma suspects (beta = 0.09 μm/y/SD; 95% CI, 0.03–0.15; P = 0.005). Participants in the upper tertile (greater than 10,524 steps/d) exhibited a 0.22-μm/y slower rate of macular GCIPL thinning than participants in the lower tertile (fewer than 6925 steps/d): −0.40 ± 0.46 μm/y versus −0.62 ± 0.55 μm/y (P = 0.003). Both time spent doing moderate/vigorous activity and mean daily active calories were positively correlated with rate of macular GCIPL thinning (moderate/vigorous activity: beta = 0.06 μm/y/SD; 95% CI, 0.01–0.105; P = 0.018; active calories: beta = 0.06 μm/y/SD; 95% CI, 0.006–0.114; P = 0.032). Analysis among 8862 eyes from the UK Biobank revealed a positive association between physical activity and cross-sectional total macular thickness (beta = 0.8 μm/SD; 95% CI, 0.47–1.14; P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS. These results highlight the potential neuroprotective benefits of exercise on the human retina
The APOE E4 Allele Is Associated with Faster Rates of Neuroretinal Thinning in a Prospective Cohort Study of Suspect and Early Glaucoma
Purpose: To investigate the association between the apolipoprotein E (APOE) E4 dementia-risk allele and prospective longitudinal retinal thinning in a cohort study of suspect and early manifest glaucoma. Design: Retrospective analysis of prospective cohort data. Participants: This study included all available eyes from participants recruited to the Progression Risk of Glaucoma: Relevant SNPs [single nucleotide polymorphisms] with Significant Association (PROGRESSA) study with genotyping data from which APOE genotypes could be determined. Methods: Apolipoprotein E alleles and genotypes were determined in PROGRESSA, and their distributions were compared with an age-matched and ancestrally matched normative cohort, the Blue Mountains Eye Study. Structural parameters of neuroretinal atrophy measured using spectral-domain OCT were compared within the PROGRESSA cohort on the basis of APOE E4 allele status. Main Outcome Measures: Longitudinal rates of thinning in the macular ganglion cell–inner plexiform layer (mGCIPL) complex and the peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRNFL). Results: Rates of mGCIPL complex thinning were faster in participants harboring ≥1 copies of the APOE E4 allele (β = –0.13 μm/year; P ≤0.001). This finding was strongest in eyes affected by normal-tension glaucoma (NTG; β = –0.20 μm/year; P = 0.003). Apolipoprotein E E4 allele carriers were also more likely to be lost to follow-up (P = 0.01) and to demonstrate a thinner average mGCIPL complex (70.9 μm vs. 71.9 μm; P = 0.011) and pRNFL (77.6 μm vs. 79.2 μm; P = 0.045) after a minimum of 3 years of monitoring. Conclusions: The APOE E4 allele was associated with faster rates of mCGIPL complex thinning, particularly in eyes with NTG. These results suggest that the APOE E4 allele may be a risk factor for retinal ganglion cell degeneration in glaucoma
Protection from ultraviolet damage and photocarcinogenesis by vitamin d compounds
© Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020. Exposure of skin cells to UV radiation results in DNA damage, which if inadequately repaired, may cause mutations. UV-induced DNA damage and reactive oxygen and nitrogen species also cause local and systemic suppression of the adaptive immune system. Together, these changes underpin the development of skin tumours. The hormone derived from vitamin D, calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) and other related compounds, working via the vitamin D receptor and at least in part through endoplasmic reticulum protein 57 (ERp57), reduce cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers and oxidative DNA damage in keratinocytes and other skin cell types after UV. Calcitriol and related compounds enhance DNA repair in keratinocytes, in part through decreased reactive oxygen species, increased p53 expression and/or activation, increased repair proteins and increased energy availability in the cell when calcitriol is present after UV exposure. There is mitochondrial damage in keratinocytes after UV. In the presence of calcitriol, but not vehicle, glycolysis is increased after UV, along with increased energy-conserving autophagy and changes consistent with enhanced mitophagy. Reduced DNA damage and reduced ROS/RNS should help reduce UV-induced immune suppression. Reduced UV immune suppression is observed after topical treatment with calcitriol and related compounds in hairless mice. These protective effects of calcitriol and related compounds presumably contribute to the observed reduction in skin tumour formation in mice after chronic exposure to UV followed by topical post-irradiation treatment with calcitriol and some, though not all, related compounds
Screening for Glaucomatous Visual Field Defects in Rural Australia with an iPad.
AIM AND OBJECTIVE: Developing improved methods for early detection of visual field defects is pivotal to reducing glaucoma-related vision loss. The Melbourne Rapid Fields screening module (MRF-S) is an iPad-based test, which allows suprathreshold screening with zone-based analysis to rapidly assess the risk of manifest glaucoma. The versatility of MRF-S has potential utility in rural areas and during infectious pandemics. This study evaluates the utility of MRF-S for detecting field defects in non-metropolitan settings. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was a prospective, multicenter, cross-sectional validation study. Two hundred and fifty-two eyes of 142 participants were recruited from rural sites through two outreach eye services in Australia. Participants were tested using MRF-S and compared with a reference standard; either Zeiss Humphrey Field Analyzer or Haag-Streit Octopus performed at the same visit. Standardized questionnaires were used to assess user acceptability. Major outcome measures were the area under the curve (AUC) for detecting mild and moderate field defects defined by the reference tests, along with corresponding performance characteristics (sensitivity, specificity). RESULTS: The mean test duration for MRF-S was 1.88 minutes compared with 5.92 minutes for reference tests. The AUCs for mild and moderate field defects were 0.81 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.75-0.87] and 0.87 (95% CI: 0.83-0.92), respectively, indicating very good diagnostic accuracy. Using a risk criterion of 55%, MRF-S identified moderate field defects with a sensitivity and specificity of 88.4 and 81.0%, respectively. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The MRF-S iPad module can identify patients with mild and moderate field defects while delivering favorable user acceptability and short test duration. This has potential application within rural locations and amidst infectious pandemics. HOW TO CITE THIS ARTICLE: Chia MA, Trang E, Agar A, et al. Screening for Glaucomatous Visual Field Defects in Rural Australia with an iPad. J Curr Glaucoma Pract 2021;15(3):125-131
Materials in the vitreous during cataract surgery: nature and incidence, with two cases of histological confirmation
BACKGROUND: To identify and classify materials in the vitreous observed during phacoemulsification cataract surgery (phaco). DESIGN: Prospective, consecutive, observational case series at one ophthalmic day surgery in Sydney, Australia. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 767 consecutive phaco cases. Cases were excluded if there was posterior capsule rupture or vitreous loss intraoperatively. METHODS: For each patient, age, gender, baseline corrected distance visual acuity, presence of pseudoexfoliation, nuclear sclerosis grade and phacoemulsification ultrasound time were recorded. The relationship between these variables and materials in the vitreous was evaluated with regression analysis. Two patients with materials in the vitreous developed an acute intraoperative rock-hard eye syndrome. In these two patients, pars plana needle aspiration of retrolenticular fluid was performed to re-establish normal intraocular pressure. Histology was undertaken to compare this fluid with known lens material retrieved from the Fluid Management System bags in two unrelated cases. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Presence of materials in the vitreous during phaco. RESULTS: Materials in the vitreous were observed in either Berger's space or the anterior vitreous in 386 eyes (50.3% of cases); the majority was putatively lens material (46.5% of all cases). Pigment and ophthalmic viscoelastic device were seen in the anterior vitreous in 9.8% and 1.7% of cases, respectively. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that higher nuclear sclerosis grade (P = 0.025), male gender (P = 0.003) and greater age (P = 0.016) were predictive of the presence of materials in the vitreous. Histological assessment with light microscopy and birefringence techniques identified the materials in the vitreous as lens material. CONCLUSION: Materials in the vitreous were seen in 50.3% of phaco cases. It has been histologically demonstrated that lens materials can be introduced into the anterior vitreous during phaco
Materials in the vitreous demonstrated under the operating microscope during cataract surgery and confirmed histologically
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