Subthreshold micropulse laser treatment has become a recognized option in the therapeutic approach to diabetic macular edema. However, some yet undefined elements pertaining to its mechanism of action and most effective treatment method still limit its clinical diffusion. We reviewed the current literature on subthreshold micropulse laser treatment, particularly focusing on its effects on the modulation of retinal neuroinflammation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of 577-nm subthreshold micropulse laser (SMPL) treatment in a large population of patients affected by mild diabetic macular edema (DME) in a real-life setting. We retrospectively evaluated 134 eyes affected by previously untreated center-involving mild DME, and treated with 577-nm SMPL, using fixed parameters. Retreatment was performed at 3 months, in case of persistent retinal thickening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To analyze and classify neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1)-related retinal vascular abnormalities (RVAs), their natural history and correlation with disease severity, in a large cohort of patients.
Methods: This was an observational longitudinal study with prospective enrollment. Four hundred and seventy-three patients affected by NF1 and 150 age-matched healthy subjects were consecutively enrolled.
Background: It is widely recognised that during exercise vagal heart rate control is markedly impaired but blood pressure control may or may not be retained. We hypothesised that this uncertainty arose from the differing responses of the vagus (fast) and sympathetic (slow) arms of the autonomic effectors, and to differing sympatho-vagal balance at different exercise intensities.
Methods And Results: We studied 12 normals at rest, during moderate (50% maximal heart rate) and submaximal (80% maximal heart rate) exercise.
Sleep-disordered breathing is associated with an altered sympathovagal balance determined by the nocturnal cyclic alternating of apneas and hyperventilation. The aim of this study was to determine whether the autonomic modulation of heart rate during obstructive apneas (OA) and central apneas (CA) in patients with sleep-disordered breathing is different. Therefore, by using the time-varying Wigner-Ville transform spectral analysis we described, in 17 patients, the time course of the low-frequency (LF) and the high-frequency (HF) components of the interbeat interval (R-R interval) reflecting, at large, respectively, the sympathetic and the parasympathetic modulation, during OA (n = 185) and CA (n = 51) and during the postapneic hyperventilation.
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