Reproducibility of retinal thickness measurements in healthy subjects using spectralis optical coherence tomography Retinal thickness measurements were highly reproducible for all ETDRS areas. Mean total retinal thickness was 342 +/-15 microm. Mean foveal thickness was 286 +/-17 microm. COVs ranged from 0.38% to 0.86%. Lowest COV was found for the temporal outer ETDRS area (area 7; COV, 0.38%). Highest COV was found for the temporal inner ETDRS area (area 3; COV, 0.86%). Mean difference between measurement 1 and 2, measurement 1 and 3, and measurement 2 and 3 for all ETDRS areas was 1.01 microm, 0.98 microm, and 0.99 microm, respectively. CONCLUSION: Spectralis OCT retinal thickness measurements in healthy volunteers showed excellent intraobserver reproducibility with virtually identical results between retinal thickness measurements performed by one operator.
3D-OCT RNFL thickness measurements in healthy volunteers showed good intra- and interobserver reproducibility. 3D-OCT provides more RNFL thickness information compared to conventional time-domain OCT measurements and may be useful for the management of glaucoma and other optic neuropathies.
Hypobaric hypoxia at very high altitude leads to small but statistically significant changes in IOP that are modulated by systemic oxygen saturation. Climbs to very high altitudes seem to be safe with regard to intraocular pressure changes.
In this single-centre retrospective case review, we investigate the long-term follow-up of birdshot retinochoroiditis (BRC) patients, analysing the impact of early, vigorous, and prolonged treatment on the evolution of indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) signs and fundus appearance. Treatment delay was calculated for each BRC patient, and patients were classified into two groups--treatment delay of <10 months (early-treatment group) and treatment delay of >10 months (delayed-treatment group). Fundus photographs and ICGA frames from the initial visit and from the last follow-up visit were assessed. Fundus photographs were evaluated for the presence of at least three circumpapillary, typical, rice-shaped birdshot lesions in one eye, inferior or nasal to the optic disc. ICGA pictures were evaluated for the presence of lesions (hypofluorescent dark dots, fuzziness). Differences were compared between the two groups and between the first visit and the last follow-up visit. In the early-treatment group, 5/6 patients had no characteristic BRC fundus lesions, but 7/7 patients in the delayed-treatment group displayed typical lesions. At last follow-up, 5/6 early-treatment patients showed no fundus lesions, and 6/7 delayed-treatment patients retained their fundus lesions. At presentation, all 13 patients exhibited lesions on ICGA. At last follow-up, ICGA lesions had completely disappeared in 4/6 early-treatment patients and 3/7 delayed-treatment patients. Thus, early and sufficiently dosed inflammation-suppressive treatment can prevent the appearance of typical BRC fundus lesions. It is therefore crucial to perform ICGA to detect otherwise occult stromal choroiditis in suspected BRC cases and to initiate adequate therapy immediately.
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