273 research outputs found

    Optic Disc Changes after Pan-Retinal Photocoagulation for Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy

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    This study aims to examine the possible effect that pan-retinal photocoagulation (PRP) performed as treatment for proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) has on the optic disc. In a retrospective study, photographs of the optic disc before and after PRP, as well as photographs of untreated eyes for the control group, were evaluated for cup-to-disc ratio and optic disc pallor as gross measures of optic nerve health. A 5-grade scheme for optic color was devised for this study by selecting representative photographs for each grade, where 5 indicated the healthiest-appearing color. Kappa statistics indicated strong intra- and inter-observer consistency of observations for both cup-to-disc ratio and optic color (0.61 and 0.79, respectively). A paired t-test showed that change in optic pallor was significant after treatment with PRP (p = 0.0004). However, when comparing to the change in the control group using a Students t-test, no significance was found (p = 0.387). No significant change was found in cup-to-disc ratio. A few conclusions can be made from this study. First, the newly created grading scheme for optic pallor is both reliable and reproducible. While PRP treatment may cause an increase in optic pallor, the change is not significantly different than that seen with merely the passage of time. Lastly, cup-to-disc ratio was not significantly affected by PRP treatment. Further studies may be indicated to elaborate on the effect of PRP on the optic nerve

    Psychiatric Case Record

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    Bipolar Disorder-Mania: Patient was apparently normal one-month back, Then all of a sudden he developed sleep disturbances –mainly difficult in initiation of sleep. He also started abusing his family members for unwanted things. Subsequently, he started talking excessively and irritable. Sometimes he sings film songs and dances. He used to say that God Supreme exists in himself and so he has all the powers of Almighty. With that superior power he says that he can solve all the problems in this world. He also says that he has invented herbs to keep people young. For the past one week, he talks excessively without having an hour of sleep & wanders here and there & found excessively smoking. He becomes excessively spiritual and goes to near by villages for offering prayers to God. He takes only a little food everyday and he is very much keen in personal cleanliness. Paranoid Schizophrenia: She was apparently normal 8 months back, then she developed sleep disturbances in the form of difficult in falling asleep. She was found talking & smiling to herself at night & day with mirror gazing. She started saying that her neighbour & relatives are planning to kill herself by poisoning. In this context she had frequent quarrels with them and she refused to take food prepared by her mother in law. She left the home at night without informing any one and started wandering in the road side near her home. She was complaining that she hears voices as if her neighbour & relatives were talking about her among themselves She was not doing house hold activities for past 6 months and she was not taking care of her child. Her personal hygiene was very much deteriorated slowly as she used to take bath & brush, only if she was asked to do so. She started abusing & assaulting the strangers and family members. Generalised Anxiety Disorder: Six months back he was apparently normal. He is working as a system analyst in a private bank . He had once, made a mistake in his bank work for which he was given charges by his employer, followed this event he becomes very tense and afraid whenever his boss called him. He is very cautious that he should not commit any mistakes. Even though he is not doing so, he fears that he may commit some mistake in his work. At that moment he develops palpitation, giddiness, breathlessness, excessive sweating over palms and soles. Slowly these symptoms present through out the day even when he was not in his office, and he could not control his fearfulness. For the past 6 months he didn’t sleep well. His sleep is disturbed by bad dreams. Recurrent Depressive Disorder: Patient was apparently alright 2 months back. Then she developed sleep disturbances particularly early morning awakening, she use to wake up by 3.00 am and use to brood about herself and started crying. She was not doing her domestic work as before, as she felt excess tiredness and use to take frequent rests. She developed poor communication. She had lost her interest in pleasurable activities and was not interested in watching TV, and attending family gatherings. She stayed aloof most of the time & calm, quiet and withdrawn. She was expressing her helplessness and hopelessness about the future. She started to have decline in maintaining self care. 15 days back, she frequently expressed suicidal ideas and she had attempted suicide by hanging herself and was rescued by neighbours. 5 days back, she started talking in an irrelevant manner. She was smiling to self. She was assaulting her family members. She was suspicious that her neighbour had done black magic on her and also saying that people are talking about her. She reported hearing the voice of her neighbour scolding and threatening her. Organic Brain Syndrome – Dementia: Ten months back he was apparently alright. Then his relatives noticed himself frequently misplaces things inside his home. Then he started behaving aggressively. He was beating his wife without reason. He was roaming here and there, running out of home and wandering aimlessly. He was not able to come back home when he goes out. He was brought back to home by his relatives. Slowly he developed fearfulness and tremulousness while he was staying alone. He also started saying that his family members & neighbours were talking about himself, in this context he would make frequent quarrels with them. He also started hearing voices of known male voices abusing himself in third person. He sleeps for few hour only. He is passing urine and motion inside the house. He is asking about his brother and mother-in-law who were expired long back. He behaves abnormally such as pouring water in the plate while eating. And his relatives found the symptoms were worsened by evening. All these symptoms started insidiously, increased in severity through time and attained the present state. No history of loss of appetite / crying spells / suicidal tendencies / convulsions / fever / head injury

    Interobserver agreement in detecting spectral-domain optical coherence tomography features of diabetic macular edema

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    Purpose: To evaluate interobserver agreement for the detection of spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SDOCT) features of diabetic macular edema (DME). Method: Cross-sectional study in which 2 retinal specialists evaluated SDOCT scans from eyes receiving treatment for DME. Scans from 50 eyes with DME of 39 patients were graded for features of DME including intra-retinal fluid (IRF), diffuse retinal oedema (DRE), hyper-reflective foci (HRF), subretinal fluid (SRF), macular fluid and vitreomacular traction (VMT). Features were graded as present or absent at zones involving the fovea, 1mm from the fovea and the whole scan of 49 line scans. Analysis was performed using cross-tabulations for percentage concordance and kappa values (Îș). Results: In the 2950 line scans analysed, there was an increase in percentage concordance for DRE and HRF when moving from a foveal line scan, 1mm zone and then to a whole scan analysis (88% vs 94% vs 96%) and (88% vs 94% vs 94%) respectively with Îș ranging from substantial to almost perfect. Percentage concordance for SRF was 96% at all 3 regions analysed, whilst IRF was 96% at fovea and 98% at higher number of line-scans analysed. Concordance for MF was 100% at fovea and 98% at 1mm zone and whole scan with almost perfect and substantial Îș respectively. Îș agreement was substantial for VMT at all regions analysed. Conclusion: We report a high level of interobserver agreement in the detection of SDOCT features of DME. This finding is important as detection of macular fluid is used to guide retreatment with anti-angiogenic agents

    Imaging Modalities Employed in Diabetic Retinopathy Screening: A Review and Meta-Analysis

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    Introduction: Urbanization has caused dramatic changes in lifestyle, and these rapid transitions have led to an increased risk of noncommunicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes. In terms of cost-effectiveness, screening for diabetic retinopathy is a critical aspect in diabetes management. The aim of this study was to review the imaging modalities employed for retinal examination in diabetic retinopathy screening. Methods: The PubMed and Web of Science databases were the main sources used to investigate the medical literature. An extensive search was performed to identify relevant articles concerning “imaging”, “diabetic retinopathy” and “screening” up to 1 June 2021. Imaging techniques were divided into the following: (i) mydriatic fundus photography, (ii) non-mydriatic fundus photography, (iii) smartphone-based imaging, and (iv) ultrawide-field imaging. A meta-analysis was performed to analyze the performance and technical failure rate of each method. Results: The technical failure rates for mydriatic and non-mydriatic digital fundus photography, smartphone-based and ultrawide-field imaging were 3.4% (95% CI: 2.3–4.6%), 12.1% (95% CI: 5.4–18.7%), 5.3% (95% CI: 1.5–9.0%) and 2.2% (95% CI: 0.3–4.0%), respectively. The rate was significantly different between all analyzed techniques (p < 0.001), and the overall failure rate was 6.6% (4.9–8.3%; I2 = 97.2%). The publication bias factor for smartphone-based imaging was significantly higher than for mydriatic digital fundus photography and non-mydriatic digital fundus photography (b = −8.61, b = −2.59 and b = −7.03, respectively; p < 0.001). Ultrawide-field imaging studies were excluded from the final sensitivity/specificity analysis, as the total number of patients included was too small. Conclusions: Regardless of the type of the device used, retinal photographs should be taken on eyes with dilated pupils, unless contraindicated, as this setting decreases the rate of ungradable images. Smartphone-based and ultrawide-field imaging may become potential alternative methods for optimized DR screening; however, there is not yet enough evidence for these techniques to displace mydriatic fundus photography

    Imaging Modalities Employed in Diabetic Retinopathy Screening: A Review and Meta-Analysis

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    Introduction: Urbanization has caused dramatic changes in lifestyle, and these rapid transitions have led to an increased risk of noncommunicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes. In terms of cost-effectiveness, screening for diabetic retinopathy is a critical aspect in diabetes management. The aim of this study was to review the imaging modalities employed for retinal examination in diabetic retinopathy screening. Methods: The PubMed and Web of Science databases were the main sources used to investigate the medical literature. An extensive search was performed to identify relevant articles concerning “imaging”, “diabetic retinopathy” and “screening” up to 1 June 2021. Imaging techniques were divided into the following: (i) mydriatic fundus photography, (ii) non-mydriatic fundus photography, (iii) smartphone-based imaging, and (iv) ultrawide-field imaging. A meta-analysis was performed to analyze the performance and technical failure rate of each method. Results: The technical failure rates for mydriatic and non-mydriatic digital fundus photography, smartphone-based and ultrawide-field imaging were 3.4% (95% CI: 2.3–4.6%), 12.1% (95% CI: 5.4–18.7%), 5.3% (95% CI: 1.5–9.0%) and 2.2% (95% CI: 0.3–4.0%), respectively. The rate was significantly different between all analyzed techniques (p < 0.001), and the overall failure rate was 6.6% (4.9–8.3%; I2 = 97.2%). The publication bias factor for smartphone-based imaging was significantly higher than for mydriatic digital fundus photography and non-mydriatic digital fundus photography (b = −8.61, b = −2.59 and b = −7.03, respectively; p < 0.001). Ultrawide-field imaging studies were excluded from the final sensitivity/specificity analysis, as the total number of patients included was too small. Conclusions: Regardless of the type of the device used, retinal photographs should be taken on eyes with dilated pupils, unless contraindicated, as this setting decreases the rate of ungradable images. Smartphone-based and ultrawide-field imaging may become potential alternative methods for optimized DR screening; however, there is not yet enough evidence for these techniques to displace mydriatic fundus photography

    Structure function correlation in retinal ischaemia and macular oedema

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    Diabetic retinopathy (DR) and retinal vein occlusion (RVO) are the two most prevalent retinal vascular diseases which affect macular perfusion, altering visual function. Firstly, healthy eyes [eyes with no structural pathology identified on Optical coherence tomography (OCT) and OCT angiogram (OCTA)] were assessed for the foveal parameters to identify the reliability of structural markers before studying pathological changes. The white ethnic group had a smaller foveal avascular zone area and perimeter compared to the Asian and Afro-Caribbean (AFC) ethnic groups, respectively in our study. Retinal capillary loss is an irreversible complication of DR. We analysed patients with advanced DR and found higher parafoveal capillary vessel density (VD) at the level of superficial capillary plexus (SCP) was associated with better best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and low luminance visual acuity (LLVA) while for radial peripapillary capillary plexus (RPCP) only VD of temporal sector was the predictor of LLVA. Disorganization of the retinal inner layers (DRIL), a potential biomarker of focal ischaemia affects LLVA more than BCVA. In a final adjusted model, the SCP density of the parafoveal area was the only parameter that most accurately ascertained BCVA and LLVA. In the next section of this thesis, functional assessment of the effect of treatment (anti-vascular endothelial growth factor [VEGF] versus laser) on active proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) showed BCVA and LLVA are well correlated before and after treatment. Our findings suggest ten letters difference between BCVA-LLVA; however, this difference becomes more remarkable for a lower level of BCVA, suggesting more advanced ischaemia affects LLVA aggressively. Next analysing, OCTA changes at the macula for PDR, and central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO), I found capillary loss was more pronounced in PDR than CRVO. The final chapter of the thesis looked at the baseline demographic and morphological changes in CRVO patients to predict vision outcomes. Baseline retinal central subfield thickness (CST) up to 900 microns can be expected to improve by 2 or more lines on Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) chart or achieve >70 letters visual acuity (VA) at 100 weeks of follow up and treatment. Age of the patient and vision at the time of diagnosis of CRVO and intact ellipsoid zone can predict BCVA at 100 weeks following initiation of treatment in CRVO eyes

    Deep learning in ophthalmology: The technical and clinical considerations

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    The advent of computer graphic processing units, improvement in mathematical models and availability of big data has allowed artificial intelligence (AI) using machine learning (ML) and deep learning (DL) techniques to achieve robust performance for broad applications in social-media, the internet of things, the automotive industry and healthcare. DL systems in particular provide improved capability in image, speech and motion recognition as well as in natural language processing. In medicine, significant progress of AI and DL systems has been demonstrated in image-centric specialties such as radiology, dermatology, pathology and ophthalmology. New studies, including pre-registered prospective clinical trials, have shown DL systems are accurate and effective in detecting diabetic retinopathy (DR), glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), retinopathy of prematurity, refractive error and in identifying cardiovascular risk factors and diseases, from digital fundus photographs. There is also increasing attention on the use of AI and DL systems in identifying disease features, progression and treatment response for retinal diseases such as neovascular AMD and diabetic macular edema using optical coherence tomography (OCT). Additionally, the application of ML to visual fields may be useful in detecting glaucoma progression. There are limited studies that incorporate clinical data including electronic health records, in AL and DL algorithms, and no prospective studies to demonstrate that AI and DL algorithms can predict the development of clinical eye disease. This article describes global eye disease burden, unmet needs and common conditions of public health importance for which AI and DL systems may be applicable. Technical and clinical aspects to build a DL system to address those needs, and the potential challenges for clinical adoption are discussed. AI, ML and DL will likely play a crucial role in clinical ophthalmology practice, with implications for screening, diagnosis and follow up of the major causes of vision impairment in the setting of ageing populations globally
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