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1.
Mil Med ; 188(1-2): e182-e189, 2023 01 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34865104

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: We describe results of the U.S. Army Ocular Teleconsultation program from 2004 through 2018 as well as the current condition, benefits, barriers, and future opportunities for teleophthalmology in the clinical settings and disease areas specific to the U.S. Military. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was a retrospective, noncomparative, consecutive case series. A total of 653 ocular teleconsultations were reviewed; 76 concerned general policy questions and underwent initial screening to determine the year each request was received, the average and median initial consultant response time, the number of participating consultants, the country from which the request originated, the military status and branch of each U.S. patient for which a request was submitted, and the nationality, age, and military status of foreign patients for whom consults were requested. The remaining 577 requests were further analyzed to determine the diagnostic category of the request, whether or not an evacuation recommendation was provided by a consultant, the relationship of the request to trauma, if and what type of nonocular specialty consultant(s) participated in the consultation request, and if and what type of ancillary imaging accompanied the request. RESULTS: The number of requests was 13 in 2004, compared to 80 in 2011 and 11 in 2018. The average response time in 2018 was 2.27 hours compared to 9. 73 hours in 2004. The number of participating ocular specialists was 5 in 2004, compared to 39 in 2013 and 13 in 2018. Requests originating from Iraq and Afghanistan comprised 61.1% (399/653) of requests. The U.S. Army personnel comprised the largest percentage of consults at 38.6% (252/653). Nonmilitary patients from the USA accounted for 18.5% (121/653) of consults. Non-U.S. patients including coalition forces, contractors, detainees, and noncombatants accounted for 14.4% (94/653) of consults, of which 22% (21/94) were children. Anterior segment consults accounted for 45.1% (260/577) of consults, with corneal surface disease being the largest subset within this diagnostic category. Evacuation was recommended in 22.7% (131/577) of overall cases and 41.1% (39/95) of trauma cases. Requests were associated with either combat-related or accidental trauma in 16.5% (95/577) of cases. Dermatology and neurology were the most commonly co-consulted specialties, representing 40.0% (32/80) and 33.75% (27/80) of consults, respectively. Photographs of suspected ocular pathology accompanied 37.4% of consults, with the likelihood requesters included photographs being greatest in cases involving pediatric ophthalmology (7/9, 77.8%) and oculoplastics (86/120, 71.7%). CONCLUSIONS: Army teleophthalmology has been an indispensable resource in supporting and advancing military medicine, helping to optimize the quality, efficiency, and accessibility of ophthalmic care for U.S. Military personnel, beneficiaries, allied forces, and local nationals worldwide. A dedicated ophthalmic care and coordination system which utilizes new advances in teleconsultation technology could further enhance our current capability to care for the ophthalmic needs of patients abroad, with opportunity for improving domestic care as well.


Assuntos
Militares , Oftalmologia , Consulta Remota , Telemedicina , Criança , Humanos , Estados Unidos , Estudos Retrospectivos , Consulta Remota/métodos
2.
Cureus ; 12(10): e11018, 2020 Oct 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33214946

RESUMO

Corneal collagen cross-linking is a minimally invasive therapeutic technique indicated for the treatment of keratoectasia. Recently, it has also been utilized for a variety of other ophthalmologic conditions ranging from infectious keratitis to corneal edema. We report the novel application of corneal collagen cross-linking in the treatment of recurrent corneal erosions secondary to wound gaping after astigmatic keratotomy (AK).

3.
Cureus ; 11(9): e5564, 2019 Sep 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31695983

RESUMO

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a rare neurodegenerative disorder with characteristic clinical and diagnostic features. We describe the unusual case of an elderly man who presented to our ophthalmology clinic with horizontal diplopia secondary to an abducens nerve (cranial nerve six) palsy and was subsequently diagnosed with CJD. Given the non-treatable nature of this disease, ophthalmologic management goals included symptomatic relief and quality of life improvement. Precautions related to the ophthalmologic management of CJD have also been addressed in this case report.

4.
Cureus ; 11(7): e5209, 2019 Jul 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31555495

RESUMO

Introduction Individual Critical Task Lists (ICTLs) are a list of requirements set forth by the United States Army which each soldier must fulfill to maintain competency in a specialty. By providing senior leadership objective criteria with which to evaluate the competency of each service member, ICTLs support commanders in ensuring that soldiers are mission ready and deployable. Board-certified ophthalmologists can meet ICTL requirements by demonstrating skills on an actual patient, a simulator, and/or cadaveric or live tissue. We sought to determine the availability of simulators that can be used to meet Army ophthalmology ICTL requirements. Methods We reviewed the current Army ICTLs for ophthalmologists. We performed an online search, as well as an extensive review of Pubmed, AccessMedicine, Academic Search Elite, Thieme, and ScienceDirect, to identify available simulators for each ICTL. We did not use any date or language restrictions in the electronic search for trials. We last searched the electronic databases on April 27, 2019. Results Army Ophthalmologists are required to maintain current status in 19 areas based on ICTLs established by the Critical Task Site and Selection Board. Eight of these requirements are not amenable to a simulation of any kind. Of the 11 remaining ICTLs, approximately 82% can be satisfied with a simulator alone based on current simulator availability. The remaining 18% of applicable ICTLs can be satisfied using cadaveric or live tissue training. Conclusions Army ophthalmologists can keep current with their ICTLs, and thus maintain mission readiness, by using either simulators or cadaveric or live tissues. This is particularly important for ophthalmologists who are either located in remote or austere locations without resources or areas with low surgical volumes. Several tasks are applicable to other medical specialties which can benefit from the same simulators.

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