Aims: To explore the gap between diagnostic research outputs and clinical use of optical coherence tomography (OCT) in glaucoma and assess the reliability of a specific reference database when applied to a morphological imaging parameter for diagnostic purposes.
Methods: Consecutive subjects enrolled in the Multicenter Italian Glaucoma Imaging Study (MIGIS) have been included in this cross-sectional, comparative evaluation of diagnostic tests study. Patients underwent measurement of global and sectorial peripapillary retinal nerve fibre thickness (pRNFL) and minimum rim width (MRW) by OCT.
Purpose: To compare the diagnostic accuracy of minimum rim width (MRW), peripapillary retinal nerve fibre layer (pRNFL) and multilayered macular analysis by Spectralis SD-OCT (Heidelberg Engineering, Germany) in discriminating perimetric glaucoma at different stages of the disease from healthy eyes.
Methods: In this multicentre, prospective, evaluation of diagnostic tests study, multilayered macular analysis and MRW and pRNFL were obtained from one eye of 197 glaucoma (76 early, 68 moderate and 53 advanced) and of 83 healthy controls from the Multicenter Italian Glaucoma Imaging Study (MIGIS). The reference standard for classifying eyes as glaucomatous and for staging the disease was the visual field.
ScientificWorldJournal
December 2014
Objective: The purpose of this study focused on understanding the mechanisms underlying ocular hydrodynamics and the changes which occur in the eyes of subjects exposed to hypobaric hypoxia (HH) to permit the achievement of more detailed knowledge in glaucomatous disease.
Methods: Twenty male subjects, aged 32±5 years, attending the Italian Air Force, were enrolled for this study. The research derived from hypobaric chamber, using helmet and mask supplied to jet pilotes connected to oxygen cylinder and equipped with a preset automatic mixer.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus
September 2014
Amblyopia is a unilateral or bilateral reduction of visual acuity secondary to abnormal visual experience during early childhood. It is one of the most common causes of vision loss and monocular blindness and is commonly associated with strabismus, anisometropia, and visual deprivation (in particular congenital cataract and ptosis). It is clinically defined as a two-line difference of best-corrected visual acuity between the eyes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurgical treatment of rectal cancer is still controversial as regards the type of operation and the extent of lymphadenectomy. Four hundred and fifty-eight patients with rectal cancer operated on at two different hospitals (206 patients, Surgical Department, S. Martino General Hospital and 252 patients, Surgical Department, Galliera General Hospital) in the decade 1980-1989 were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOf great interest today is the debate regarding the benefits and limitations of extended lymphadenectomy in rectal cancer, particularly with regard to patient survival. In the present report we review the experience of two different surgical departments: a total of 458 patients with rectal cancer were operated on in the 1st Surgical Department of S. Martino Hospital, Genoa, and in the 1st Surgical Department of Galliera Hospital, Genoa over the period from 1980 to 1989.
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