Publications by authors named "Yoshiki Toda"

The optineurin gene (OPTN) was identified as a gene that causes primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and normal tension glaucoma (NTG). To investigate the frequency of sequence changes in OPTN in Japanese glaucoma patients, single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and subsequent sequence analysis were performed for genotyping OPTN in 165 unrelated Japanese patients with POAG and 148 patients with NTG, with 196 control subjects without glaucoma as reference subjects. Out of four mutations reported to be associated with risk and to cause disease in Caucasian patients, sequence alterations in 458G > A and 691_692insAG were not detected in any investigated Japanese patients with glaucoma, and alterations in 1944G > A and 603T > A, were present in similar frequencies in glaucoma patients and control subjects.

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Glaucoma represents one of the most common eye diseases and is characterized by progressive loss of visual fields. In the more advanced stages bilateral blindness may result, due to optic nerve atrophy and an excavated optic nerve head. Open-angle glaucoma is one of the main disease subsets, which may be further divided into high tension primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and normal tension glaucoma (NTG).

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Purpose: In a previous study we demonstrated that the progression of the disease retinitis pigmentosa (RP) can be readily monitored by the mean deviation (MD) measured by Humphrey central 10-2 perimetry, which assesses the sensitivity distribution in the macular area in eyes affected by RP. In the present study, we investigated whether the 10 degrees perimetric results could predict the time of declining visual acuity in eyes with RP in a cross-sectional study.

Methods: Humphrey 10-2 perimetry results and visual acuity were studied in the right eyes of 69 patients with typical RP.

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