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Volume 105, Issue 11, Pages 2068-2076 (1 November 1998)


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Differentiating patients with glaucoma from glaucoma suspects and normal subjects by nerve fiber layer assessment with scanning laser polarimetry1, 2

Presented in part at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology annual meeting, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, May 1997.

Neil T Choplin, MDCorresponding Author Information1, Diane C Lundy, MD1, Andreas W Dreher, PhD2

Received 10 October 1997; accepted 16 June 1998.

Abstract 

Purpose

A study was conducted to determine normative data for nerve fiber layer measurements as obtained by scanning laser polarimetry with the Laser Diagnostic Technologies Nerve Fiber Analyzer II, identify factors affecting the measurements, and identify parameters capable of differentiating normal subjects from patients with glaucoma and patients suspected of having glaucoma because of ocular hypertension or because of a large cup-to-disc ratio (GS-disc).

Design

A case series.

Participants

Four hundred normal subjects, 35 patients with ocular hypertension, 42 patients with glaucoma, and 17 glaucoma suspects based on optic disc appearance participated.

Methods

Nerve fiber layer thickness assessments were determined in normal subjects (with normal appearing optic nerves and normal visual fields). The results were compared to measurements from samples of age-matched patients with ocular hypertension (with normal visual fields), patients suspected of having glaucoma based on enlarged cup-to-disc ratios, and patients with open-angle glaucoma who had visual field loss.

Results

The majority of the parameters derived from the measurements showed no significant relationship to age, although some parameters tended to decrease with increasing age. Multiple parameters showed statistically significant differences between normal subjects and patients with glaucoma. In particular, the intraellipse sector variability, an indirect measure of the shape of the nerve fiber layer in an ellipse surrounding the nerve head, showed statistically significant differences between normal subjects and patients with glaucoma as well as between glaucoma suspects and normal subjects. Similar results were seen with the superior maxima, the average thickness assessment value of the 1500 thickest points in the superior bundle.

Conclusions

Assessments of nerve fiber layer thickness as determined by scanning laser polarimetry can differentiate patients with glaucoma from normal subjects and may identify otherwise undetected damage in glaucoma suspects.

Manuscript no. 97722.

1 Departments of Ophthalmology and Clinical Research, Naval Medical Center, San Diego, California, USA

2 Laser Diagnostic Technologies, San Diego, California, USA

Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence and reprint requests to Neil T. Choplin, MD, Clinical Research Department, Naval Medical Center San Diego, 34800 Bob Wilson Drive, San Diego, CA 92134-5000 USA

 Supported by Navy Clinical Investigation Program #S-93-LH000-082.

1 Drs. Choplin and Lundy have no proprietary interest in any product discussed in this presentation, and this presentation is not intended to be a commercial endorsement of any product by the Navy or the United States government. Dr. Dreher is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Laser Diagnostic Technologies and has a proprietary interest in the Nerve Fiber Analyzer.

2 The views contained in this presentation are those of the authors and are not to be construed as being the official opinions of the Department of the Navy, the Department of Defense, or the United States government.

PII: S0161-6420(98)91127-7

doi:10.1016/S0161-6420(98)91127-7


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