Term
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Definition
any non-invasive technique to clinically evaluate the IOP by applying a foce to the globe and relating that force to teh deformation of the globe |
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Term
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Definition
the only method by which to get a true IOP measurement, however this is not a practical way to measure IOP since it involves the introduction of a cannula into teh eye |
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Term
What are the three general types of tonometry? |
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Definition
1) Indentation (Schiotz)
2) Applanation (Goldmann, Perkins ahnd help, tonopen, pneumotonometer, mackay marg, NCT and Keeler pulsair)
3) Dynamic Contour Tonometry (PASCAL by Zeimer) |
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Term
Describe indentation tonometry: |
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Definition
Schiotz (rarely used anymore):
- measures the amount of indentation created by a fixed force
- as the patient is lying down, the plunger of a set weight will indent the cornea by an amount
- the amount of movement of the plunger indicaes the IOP by a reference chart
- the method is similar to pushing your finger into a balloon
- since this decreases the internal volume of the eye, it may give artificially high IOP
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Term
Describe applanation tonometry: |
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Definition
Measures the force necessary to flatten a standard area
- Goldmann - pressure needed to applanate a standard area
- Perkens hand held - standard area
- Tonopen - standard area
- Pneumotonometer - standard area
- Mackay Marg - standard area
- NCT and Keeler Pulsair - amount of applanation with a standard force
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Term
Describe dynamic contour tonometry (DCT): |
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Definition
provides a direct trans-corneal IOP measurement
- PASCAL by Zeimer:
- claims to eliminate the errors with corneal thickness and rigidity
- can also detect the ocular pulse amplitude (OPA) due to the patient's heartbeat
- mounted on the slit lamp
- single use tip cover is needed
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Term
What is Imbert-Fick law?? |
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Definition
the background theory for Goldmann tonometry:
the pressure inside any sphere can be found by: W = P x A
W = applanation force
P = measured pressure
A = applanation area
Considering this formula, the amount of pressure may be found by stnadardizing either the area of applanation (fixed area) or the aount of force (fixed force) |
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Term
How must Imbert-Fick law be modified for the human cornea? Why? |
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Definition
the law only works if the membrane of the sphere is:
- infinitely thin
- perfectly flexible
- perfectly elastic
- dry
thus, the equation is modified for the cornea to:
W + S = (P x Ai) +b
S = force due to tears which pull the applanating surface towards the cornea
b = force requred to bend the cornea due to its rigidity and thickness
Ai - area of the inner corneal surface which is flattenered, since this is the surface against which the IOP act
NOTE: S anb b cancel each other out when teh applanation is performed with a 3.06mm diameter circle. the Goldmann probes applanate a 3.06mm circle, therefore the simpler Imbert-Fick law is applicable to Goldmann tonometry |
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Term
When should you perform tonometry? |
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Definition
- all patients during a routine eye exam for baseline data
- applanation tonometry should be performed on all cooperative patients regardless of age
- all patients before dilation/cycloplegia
- glaucoma suspects/patients
- usually done at the end of the slit lamp exam and BEFORE dilation. Hoever, man practitioners have NCT done as a pretest
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Term
When should you consider postponing tonometry? |
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Definition
The following conditions relate to possibilities of infection or inaccuracy in measurement and may contraindicate tonometry:
- recent ocular injury (perforation, corneal abrasion or chemical burn)
- ocular infection or discharge
- herpes on teh cornea or lids
- marked corneal edema: increass the chance of epithelial displacement and causes inaccurate readings
- marked nystagmus
- corneal distortion, thickening, stromal loss or major scarring
- significant apprehension, blepharospasm, or strong Bell's phenomenon as avoidance response
- constant uncontrollable coughing
- endemic out breaking of ocular infections such as epidemic keratoconjunctivitis (adenovirus type 8)
- use your common sense for certain situations
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Term
Inherent difficulties in using IOP as a test for glaucoma: |
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Definition
- ocular hypertension
- low tension and normotensive glaucoma
- upper limits of normal depends on the instrument
- wide diurnal variations
- instrument variations
unless IOPs are very high (40mmHg), glaucoma cannot be diagnosed based on IOP's alone |
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Term
Expected Values: Normal
- Normal:
- Most:
- Dirunal variations:
- Difference between OD and OS:
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Definition
- Normal: 8-21 mmHg
- Most: 10-22 mmHg
- Dirunal variations: 4-6 mmHg
- Difference between OD and OS: 2-3 mmHg
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Term
Expected Values: Borderline
- Borderline:
- Dirunal variations:
- Difference between OD and OS:
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Definition
- Borderline: 21-24 mmHg
- Dirunal variations: 6-9 mmHg
- Difference between OD and OS: 4-6 mmHg
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Term
Expected Values: Abnormal
- Abnormal:
- Dirunal variations:
- Difference between OD and OS:
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Definition
- Abnormal: >24 mmHg
- Dirunal variations: >9 mmHg
- Difference between OD and OS: >6 mmHg
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Term
IOP Measurement Variables: |
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Definition
- method of measurement
- diurnal variations
- corneal thickness
- refractive surgery
- patient apprehension and tight lids
- accommodation
- fluid intake
- pharmaceutical agents
- corneal hydration
- corneal biomechanics
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Term
Basics for ALL tonometry: |
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Definition
- tonometer must be clean, including all contact surfaces
- instructions to patients and a brief description of what you will be doing
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Term
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Definition
- patient's name
- doctor's name
- date
- DPA's used and time instilled
- time of tonometry
- type of tonometry
- each eye's recordings in mmHg (not an average)
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Term
Diagnostic Pharmaceutical Agents (DPA's):
What are they used for? |
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Definition
- used to aid in teh examination or assist in making a diagnosis
- not used directly for treatment
- anesthetics for tonometry
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Term
What three things MUST be covered before installing ANY drops? |
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Definition
- Case History: Ocular History!
- previous history with eye drops (any previous problems with drops? anesthetics?)
- pregnancy category C
- VA's (ALWAYS!!!)
- history of reacting to anesthetic at the dentist
- consider alternative procedures which avoid use of anesthetics
- this is very rare!
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Term
What color cap are local anesthetics? |
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Definition
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Term
Uses for local anesthetics? |
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Definition
- tonometry
- gonioscopy
- examining corneal injury if patient is unable to cooperate due to pain
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Term
Local Anesthetics:
- Onset:
- Duration:
- Effects on Cornea:
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Definition
- Onset: 15 seconds
- Duration: 15-30 minutes
- Effects on Cornea:
- epithelium will remain "soft" for about one hour
- cornea is more permeable for up to 2 hours (make it more penetrable to teh mydriatic drops)
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Term
Local Anesthetics:
Side Effects |
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Definition
- delayed wound healing
- corneal sloughing if used repeatedly
- decrease fluorescence of dyes
- sting upon application
- redness
- frontal headache
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Term
Local Anesthetics:
What are the two most commonly used?
Which is the DOC? Why? |
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Definition
Proparacaine 0.5%
- DOC
- least discomfort
- rare allergies
Tetracaine 0.5%
- more corneal toxicity than proparacaine
- stings more than proparacain
- allergic reaction more common than with proparacaine
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Term
Describe non-contact tonometer: |
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Definition
AO NCT:
- standardized air blast is directed at the cornea
- corneal deformity is measured by photoelectric cells
- this is transformed into a reading in mmHg
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Term
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Definition
- no anesthesia
- relatively easy (?)
- less patient apprehension (??)
- little side effects
- easy to train technicians to use
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Term
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Definition
- large
- less accurate
- some patients hate it
- a dinosaur
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Keeler Pulsair:
Advantages |
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Definition
- gentler puff (about 1/4 of AO NCT)
- great for kids!
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Term
Keeler Pulsair:
Disadvantages |
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Definition
- expensive (~$6,000-7,000)
- steep learning curve (tricky alignment until experienced)
- need about 5 readings to get a good average
- makes a noise like a vacuum cleaner which can be distracting to patients
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Term
Keeler Pulsair:
Instrument Parts |
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Definition
- the size of a large briefcase
- main "case" has all teh pressure generating machinery
- cord to connect the housing and the hand held portion of the instrument
- the hand held portion looks like a staple gun
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Term
Keeler Pulsair:
Procedure |
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Definition
- educate the patient about the procedure
- switch the machine on
- remove the hand piece from the cradle and press the set-reset switch to zero the machine
- hold the jet nozzle about 20mm from the patient's cornea
- hold the tonometer plane to the patient's face and directly along the visual axis
- have the patient look between the two red lights and open wide
- steady the tonometer by placing your hand on both the instrument and the patient's forehead
- align the red corneal reflexes with the center of the eyepiece
- the tonometer will activate automatically once the alignment is achieved
- press the set-reset button and repeat the measurement
- record as with any other tonometry, stating the type of tonometry used
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Term
Hand Held NTC:
(other than Keeler Pulsair)
Advantages |
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Definition
- portability
- cordless
- easy to use
- "softest puff available today"
- measures automatically upon alignment
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Term
Hand Held NTC:
(other than Keeler Pulsair)
Procedure |
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Definition
- doctor views patient's eye through the eye piece and moves the instrument towards the patient's eye
- once the instrument has a view of an eye, an alignment system is activated automatically which guides the operator
- it fires automatically once alignment is reached
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Term
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Definition
- small
- good for screenings and ambulatory patients
- good for patient's with corneal scarring
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Term
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Definition
- expensive (~$3,500)
- requires anesthetic
- requires tip covers
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Term
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Definition
- 1.0mm transducer tip
- displays the average of 10 independent readings
- displays statistical confidence of average readings
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Term
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Definition
- place latex cover over the probe prior to calibration
- hold the switch down until a beep is heard, instrument will show = = =
- release teh switch and the display will be _ _ _ followed by another beep
- hold the instrument vertically with the probe down and press the switch twice quickly. Two beeps will sound and there will be a "CAL" display
- another beep will sound and the display with read "UP"
- now turn the tonometer so that the probe is up and the instrument is vertical. A beep should sound followed by a readout of "Good". You are now ready to start
- if "Bad" is displayed, repeate the above until "Good" is displayed
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Term
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Definition
- calibrate the instrument daily
- give adequate patient instructions
- instill anesthetic
- place latex glove on the tonometer head
- fixation target for the patient
- hold instrument like a pen, perpendicular to the patient's central cornea
- anchor ring finger on patient's cheek
- lightly tap on the cornea several times listening for the chirp sound
- a beep will sound when enough valid readings have been taken
- an average IOP estimate will be displayed
- record your findings, indicating teh type of tonometry used
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Term
Proview Phosphene Tonometer:
Describe how it works |
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Definition
- uses pressure phosphene phenomenon to determine intraocular pressure
- pressure required to produce a phosphene correlates with IOP
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Term
Proview Phosphene Tonometer:
Advantages |
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Definition
- inexpensive
- well tolerated
- non-invasive
- self monitor/travel capabilities
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Term
Proview Phosphene Tonometer:
Disadvantages |
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Definition
- not well normed
- over estimates at higher IOPs
- false sense of security
- not everyone notices the phosphenes
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Term
Proview Phosphene Tonometer:
Procedure |
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Definition
- patient looks down and temporally (eye open)
- a small plunger is placed on the nasal lid and pressed until the patient notes the phosphene
- pressure is determined by how hard the plunger had to be presed
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Term
Icare Tonometer:
Advantages |
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Definition
- no anesthesia or dye are necessary
- hand held
- easy to use
- portable
- words for difficult patients
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Term
Icare Tonometer:
Disadvantages |
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Definition
- need a new probe for every patient
- expensive (~$3,500)
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Term
Icare Tonometer:
Describe how it works |
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Definition
- uses a new measuring principle (Rebound Technology)
- a very light blunt tipped probe is projected onto teh cornea
- the probe rebounds off the cornea and sensors measure the IOP (average of 6 readings)
- the measurement is barely noticed by the patient (may not cause corneal reflex)
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Term
Diaton Tonometer:
Advantages |
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Definition
- measures IOP through the eyelid
- no anesthesia required
- no contact with teh cornea
- hand held and portable
- BUT, expensive (~$2,500)
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Term
How is PASCAL DCT different than Goldmann? |
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Definition
DCT is NOT a variable force tonometer |
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
What method does it use? |
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Definition
contour matching instead of applanation
(minimizes influencing factors, such as CCT, curvature, rigidity and elasticity) |
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Describe how the instrument works |
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Definition
- instrument uses a miniature pressure sensor embedded in the tip
- the tip matches corneal curvature with minimal corneal deformation and constant oppositional force
- measures IOP directly using the build-in pressure sensory
- when the sensor is subjected to a chance in pressure:
- the electrical resistance is altered, and
- the PASCAL's computer calculates a change in pressure similar to the change in resistance
- **this is the KEY to the PASCAL's ability to neutralize the effect of intra-individual variation in corneal properties
- once the portion of the central cornea has taken up the shape of the tip, the integrated pressure sensor begins to acquire data
- measures IOP 100 times per second (a complete measurement cycle requires about 8 seconds of contact time(
- during the measurement cycle, adio feedback is generated, which helps the clinician insure proper contact with the cornea
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
What is the key that allows PASCAL to neutralize the effect of intra-individual variation in corneal properties? |
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Definition
when the sensor is subjected to a change in pressure:
- the electrical resistance is altered, and
- the PASCAL's computer calculates a change in pressure similar to teh change in resistance
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
What is the design of the tip? |
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Definition
- tip radius: 10.5mm
- the tip rests on the cornea with a constant appositional force of one gram
- this is an important difference from all forms of applanation tonometry in which the probe force is variable
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Details of measurements: |
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Definition
- allows for continuous reading of IOP waveform
- records the dynamic pressure fluctuations of the eye
- when the piezoresistive pressure sensor detects pressure, it is digitized and stored in teh device's memory
- determines the intro-ocular pressure and its pulsatile fluctuations
- OPA = ocular pulse amplitude
- caused by cardiac activity
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Term
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Definition
- place new probe cover on sensor tip
- patient needs to be anesthetized
- activate it with a small turn of the blue knob
- advance the probe to touch the eye
- need to have enough pressure to get adequate readings
- will see a circular tear film area - center this
- acquire proper sound
- need to leave the tip on the cornea for at least 8 seconds
- when the PASCAL sensor tip touches the corneal surface, a piezoresistive pressure sensor directly measures IOP
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Digital Display |
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Definition
- IOP: average minimum
- OPA: ocular pulse amplitude
- Q-Values: quality score of the reading (1-5)
- 1-2 = excellent
- 3 = acceptable
- 4-5 = unreliable
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Potential Use of OPA |
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Definition
- normal OPA range found to be 3.0 +/- 1.2
- positive correlation between higher IOP and higher OPA
- link between lower OPA and NTG (normotensive glaucoma)
- softer eye gives smaller OPA
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
OPA Correlations in Hispanic Population: |
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Definition
- OPA decreases with:
- increasing axial length
- increasing myopia
- OPA increases with:
- In this study, OPA:
- range from 0.7-4.7 mmHg
- mean OPA was 2.1 mmHg
- Four subjects had OPA < 1.0 - all were myopic
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Price of Instrument |
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Definition
~$6,000 range, which discount as you buy more of them
$0.75 per tip cover |
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Term
Issues with GAT:
Corneal Thickness |
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Definition
- OHTS study found:
- thicker corneas have higher measured IOP (false high) that doesn't respond well to meds
- thinner corneas have lower measured IOP (false low) and have a greater chance of converting from OHTN to glaucoma
- GAT measures based on 520 micrometers, but:
- Caucasians: ave 555
- African-Americans: ave 535
- Mean K thickness: 545-550
- Need to find corrective factor for K thickness
- studies have found anywhere from 1.5-4.5 mmHg for every 50 microns of corneal thickness
- error factor: 2.5 mmHg for every 50 microns away from 550 (subtract if above, add if below)
- LASIK patients:
- 1D of correction = 12 microns reduction in K
- 5D correction = 60 microns reductin in K
- depending on corrective factor, need to adjust IOP anywhere from 1.5-4.5 mmHg
- adding pachymetry to the equation became the standard of care in the past few years
- recent research is showing that this is an unreliable way to compensate for this problem
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Reasons for PASCAL |
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Definition
- problems with GAT revealed by the OHTS study (adding pachymetry to equation of IOP is proving to be an unreliable way to compensate for varying corneal thicknesses)
- developed to accurately measure the IOP without the influence of corneal thickness and rigidity
- the name is after Blaise Pascal, the seventeeth century mathematician and physicist
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Term
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Definition
- show that DCT IOP to closely compare to manometric values in cadaver eyes
- sho that pre- and post-LASIK IOP reveals no significant change in IOP with the instrument
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Corneal properties that affect IOP measurement: |
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Definition
- biomechanical material properties:
- collagen and supporting matrix
- hydration
- age (stiffer corneas and reduced tear film with age)
- effects of corneal biomechanical properties alone:
- stiffer cornea = higher IOP
- softer cornea = lower IOP
- potential error is huge (>10 mmHg)
- corneal thickness (CCT)
- thicker cornea = higher measured IOP
- thinner cornea = lower measured IOP
- potential error is moderate
- corneal curvature:
- flatter cornea = lower measured IOP
- steeper cornea = higher measured IOP
- potential error is low
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Term
PASCAL DCT:
Summary of corneal biomechanics effects from Liu and Roberts: |
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Definition
- corneal radius of curvature: very small
- central corneal thickeness: small/moderate
- corneal material properties: large
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Term
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Definition
- DCT is significantly less susceptible to the effects of CCT than GAT
- GAT overestimates DCT in older subjects
- suggests an age-related corneal biomechanical change that may induce error
- where does that leave us? MORE RESEARCH!
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