The purpose of this study is to determine if there is an association between eye size and the volume of the orbit in adult subjects. Thirty-three subjects with varying degrees of ametropia (+1.00 to -12.75 D) underwent magnetic resonance scan of the orbit. Results show that the larger myopic eye was not associated with a larger orbit.
The purpose of this study was to examine the development of the orbit in Hong Kong Chinese subjects. Orbit volume was determined from magnetic resonance images of 81 subjects aged from 1 to 42 years old. Results show that orbit volume ranged from 11.56 to 25.50 cm3. In the first year of life, the mean orbit volume was 12.36 cm3. The orbit showed rapid growth in the first 3 years of life. From about 1-3 years old, the mean volume was 15.31 cm3. The orbit grew steadily to the age of 10 years. From age 11 to 15 years old, the mean volume was 20.24 cm3. Orbit growth levelled off at about 16 years of age with the mean volume at 21.00 cm3.
Myelinated axons of white matter demonstrate prominent directional differences in water diffusion. We performed diffusion-weighted imaging on ten patients with head injury to explore the feasibility of using water diffusion anisotropy for quantitating diffuse axonal injury. We showed significant decrease in diffusion anisotropy indices in areas with or without signal abnormality on T2 and T2*-weighted images. We conclude that the water diffusion anisotropy index a potentially useful, sensitive and quantitative way of diagnosing and assessing patients with diffuse axonal injury.
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