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1.
Clin Exp Optom ; 103(6): 813-820, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32066203

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the repeatability of masked Goldmann tonometry performed by optometry students on patients with glaucoma. METHODS: Subjects were recruited from among patients scheduled to undergo selective laser trabeculoplasty at the Rosenberg School of Optometry clinic. Each subject had masked Goldmann tonometry performed by three examiners at each office visit: two fourth professional-year optometry interns and an attending optometrist. Each examiner performed three sequential masked tonometry measurements on each eye. RESULTS: Twenty-eight interns and two optometrists performed masked Goldmann tonometry on 12 glaucoma patients. The co-efficient of variation was 9.1 per cent for the right eye and 12.1 per cent for the left eye for interns compared with 6.4 per cent right eye and 6.6 per cent left eye for optometrists. There was significant interaction between intern and patient on co-efficient of variation (two-factor analysis of variance, p = 0.005), indicating co-efficient of variation was influenced by both intern and patient factors. No such interaction was found for optometrist-performed measurements (p = 0.96). Mean interobserver difference for interns ranged between 0.9 and 3.1 mmHg, with 95 per cent limits of agreement that were proportional to mean intraocular pressure. Mean interobserver difference for optometrists ranged between 0.6 and 1.8 mmHg without proportionality bias. At higher pressure levels intern measurements became more variable and tended to overestimate optometrist measurements. CONCLUSIONS: Both intraobserver and interobserver repeatability of masked tonometry was lower for interns than experienced optometrists. Intern performance differed from optometrists in that intern measurements became more variable at higher intraocular pressure levels and were significantly influenced by patient factors. The present results support the need for trainee exposure to patients with abnormally elevated intraocular pressure. Research into factors that influence trainee Goldmann tonometry repeatability is needed.


Subject(s)
Glaucoma , Optometry , Glaucoma/diagnosis , Humans , Intraocular Pressure , Manometry , Reproducibility of Results , Students , Tonometry, Ocular
2.
Clin Ophthalmol ; 12: 1713-1729, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30233135

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the intrasession and intersession repeatability of visual evoked potentials in normal adults over 40 years of age as recorded using the Diopsys NOVA LX fixed protocol. METHODS: Inclusion criteria were adults aged over 40 years with best corrected distance acuity of 20/40 or better in each eye. Subjects underwent three consecutive visual evoked potential examinations using the Diopsys NOVA LX fixed protocol. All examination procedures were carried out in accordance with the manufacturer recommendations. To assess intersession repeatability, nine subjects returned in 2-6 weeks for repeat examination. RESULTS: A total of 46 subjects were recruited. Mean ± SD age: 53±9 years (range: 40-84 years); 69% of subjects were female and 80% were non-white. Coefficients of variation (CVs) and intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs) revealed greater repeatability for P100 latency (CV: 3%-7%; ICC: 0.39-0.76) than for P100 amplitude (CV: 21%-33%; ICC: 0.34-0.69) and greater repeatability for recordings made with high contrast stimuli (amplitude CV: 21%-23%; latency CV: 3%-7%) than low contrast stimuli (amplitude CV: 24%-33%; latency CV: 6%-7%). Minimum detectable change values ranged between 4.50 and 9.95 µv for amplitude and 8.16-15.26 ms for latency. Repeatability was not influenced by age, sex, or race. CONCLUSION: The Diopsys NOVA LX fixed protocol demonstrated clinically acceptable intrasession and intersession repeatability in these healthy older adults, with latency being more repeatable than amplitude and examinations employing high contrast stimuli being more repeatable than those using low contrast stimuli.

3.
J Curr Glaucoma Pract ; 12(1): 29-35, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29861579

ABSTRACT

AIM: To determine the association of Diopsys® NOVA-LX amplitude and latency abnormality scores with perimetric staging of chronic glaucoma, and to explore potential single-visit short-duration transient visual evoked potential (SD-tVEP) trend detection ability utilizing Humphrey 30-2 field progression data. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Setting: Glaucoma subspecialty clinic. Participants: Treated adult chronic glaucoma patients undergoing SD-tVEP evaluation. Main outcome measures: (1) Proportion of eyes designated as suspect or abnormal by the NOVA-LX multifactorial algorithm were determined as a function of glaucoma severity using the most recent Humphrey visual field analyzer (HVFA) 30-2 field. (2) Association between long-term HVFA-guided progression analysis (GPA) annual slopes and SD-tVEP abnormality was assessed to determine whether a single VEP test might help to identify eyes more prone to progressive visual field (VF) loss. RESULTS: One hundred and thirty-three eyes of 84 patients (mean age 68 years) were analyzed. The SD-tVEP abnormality increased proportionately with severity of VF loss under high-contrast (Hc) test conditions for both latency (p = 0.001) and amplitude (p < 0.01). The HVFA progression analysis printouts existed for 91 eyes (mean 12.3 fields per eye/range 5-18). Nearly three-quarters (72.5%) of eyes with mean annual HVFA progression >0.7 dB/year (n = 29) had single-visit VEP latency abnormalities. Fewer than half (46.7%) of the remainder (n = 62) showed latency abnormality. Mean progression for eyes with abnormal vs normal VEP latency was -0.87 ± 0.3 dB/year vs -0.32 ± 0.4 dB/year. CONCLUSION: Diopsys NOVA-LX Hc latency abnormality shows strong association with VF loss among a diverse population of clinical patients undergoing active treatment for chronic glaucoma, and appears likely to afford clinically useful trend-detecting test. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The SD-tVEP has the potential to serve as a single-visit clinical indicator to identify glaucoma patients at high risk for VF progression.How to cite this article: Trevino R, Sponsel WE, Majcher CE, Allen J, Rabin J. Association of Diopsys® Short-duration Transient Visual Evoked Potential Latency with Visual Field Progression in Chronic Glaucoma. J Curr Glaucoma Pract 2018;12(1):29-35.

4.
Transl Vis Sci Technol ; 6(6): 6, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29134137

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Both pattern electroretinography (PERG) and visual evoked potentials (VEP) can be performed using low- (15%; Lc) and high- (85%; Hc) contrast gratings that may preferentially stimulate the magno- and parvocellular pathways. We observed that among glaucomatous patients showing only one VEP latency deficit per eye, there appeared to be a very strong tendency for an Hc delay in one eye and an Lc delay in the other. METHODS: Diopsys NOVA-LX system was used to measure VEP Hc and Lc latency among a clinical glaucoma population to find all individuals with either a single Hc or Lc latency abnormality in each eye (group 1), or with greater than 0 and less than 4 Hc or Lc VEP latency abnormalities in the two eyes (group 2) to determine whether a significant inverse correlation existed for these values in either group. Hc and Lc PERG data were also evaluated to assess associated retinal ganglion cell responses. RESULTS: A strong inverse correlation (P = 0.0000003) was observed between the Hc and Lc VEP latency values among the 64 eyes in group 1. Group 2 provided a comparable result (n = 143; 286 eyes; P = 0.0005). PERG (n = 81; 162 eyes) also showed strong bilateral symmetry for magnitude values (P < 0.0001 for both Lc and Hc in groups 1 and 2). CONCLUSIONS: Bilateral retention of both low-resolution/high-speed and high-resolution/low-speed function may persist with both eyes open despite symmetrically pathologic retinal ganglion cell PERG waveform asynchrony for Hc and Lc stimuli in the paired eyes. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: Clinical electrophysiology strongly suggests binocular compensation for dynamic dysfunction operates under central nervous system (CNS) control in glaucoma.

5.
PLoS One ; 11(5): e0156389, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27233041

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To compare the effectiveness of an educational board game with interactive didactic instruction for teaching optometry students elements of the core optometric curriculum. METHODS: Forty-two optometry students were divided into two GPA-matched groups and assigned to either 12 hours of game play (game group) or 12 hours of interactive didactic instruction (lecture group). The same material from the core optometric curriculum was delivered to both groups. Game play was accomplished via an original board game. Written examinations assessed change in knowledge level. A post-intervention opinion survey assessed student attitudes. RESULTS: There was no significant difference in pre- or post-intervention test scores between the lecture and game groups (Pre-test: p = 0.9; Post-test: p = 0.5). Post-intervention test scores increased significantly from baseline (Game group: 29.3% gain, Didactic group: 31.5% gain; p<0.001 for each). The score increase difference between groups was not statistically significant (p = 0.6). The post-intervention attitude survey did not reveal any significant between group differences (p = 0.5). CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that an educational game and interactive didactic instruction can be equally effective in teaching optometry students basic and applied science. Furthermore, both modes of instruction have the potential to be equally engaging and enjoyable experiences.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical/methods , Games, Recreational , Optometry/education , Students , Games, Recreational/psychology , Humans , Students/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires
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