7 results on '"Khachatryan, Naira"'
Search Results
2. Rate and Pattern of Rim Area Loss in Healthy and Progressing Glaucoma Eyes
- Author
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Hammel, Na'ama, Belghith, Akram, Bowd, Christopher, Medeiros, Felipe A, Sharpsten, Lucie, Mendoza, Nadia, Tatham, Andrew J, Khachatryan, Naira, Liebmann, Jeffrey M, Girkin, Christopher A, Weinreb, Robert N, and Zangwill, Linda M
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Ophthalmology and Optometry ,Aging ,Neurodegenerative ,Clinical Research ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Black People ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Glaucoma ,Open-Angle ,Healthy Volunteers ,Humans ,Intraocular Pressure ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Ophthalmoscopy ,Optic Disk ,Optic Nerve Diseases ,Prospective Studies ,Scotoma ,Tonometry ,Ocular ,Visual Field Tests ,Visual Fields ,White People ,Young Adult ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Ophthalmology and optometry - Abstract
PurposeTo characterize the rate and pattern of age-related and glaucomatous neuroretinal rim area changes in subjects of African and European descent.DesignProspective longitudinal study.ParticipantsTwo hundred ninety-six eyes of 157 healthy subjects (88 patients of African descent and 69 of European descent) and 73 progressing glaucoma eyes of 67 subjects (24 patients of African descent and 43 of European descent) from the Diagnostic Innovations in Glaucoma Study and the African Descent and Glaucoma Evaluation Study were included.MethodsGlobal and sectoral rim areas were measured using confocal laser scanning ophthalmoscopy. Masked stereophotograph review determined progression of glaucomatous optic disc damage. The rates of absolute rim area loss and percentage rim area loss in healthy and progressing glaucomatous eyes were compared using multivariate, nested, mixed-effects models.Main outcome measuresRate of rim area loss over time.ResultsThe median follow-up time was 5.0 years (interquartile range, 2.0-7.4 years) for healthy eyes and 8.3 years (interquartile range, 7.5-9.9 years) for progressing glaucoma eyes. The mean rate of global rim area loss was significantly faster in progressing glaucomatous eyes compared with healthy eyes for both rim area loss (-10.2×10(-3) vs. -2.8×10(-3) mm(2)/year, respectively; P < 0.001) and percentage rim area loss (-1.1% vs. -0.2%/year, respectively; P < 0.001), but considerable overlap existed between the 2 groups. Sixty-three percent of progressing glaucoma eyes had a rate of change faster than the fifth quantile of healthy eyes. For both healthy and progressing eyes, the pattern of rim area loss and percentage rim area loss were similar, tending to be fastest in the superior temporal and inferior temporal sectors. The rate of change was similar in progressing eyes of patients of African or European descent.ConclusionsCompared with healthy eyes, the mean rate of global rim area loss was 3.7 times faster and the mean rate of global percentage rim area loss was 5.4 times faster in progressing glaucoma eyes. A reference database of healthy eyes can be used to help clinicians distinguish age-related rim area loss from rim area loss resulting from glaucoma.
- Published
- 2016
3. Diagnostic Accuracy of the Spectralis and Cirrus Reference Databases in Differentiating between Healthy and Early Glaucoma Eyes
- Author
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Silverman, Anna L, Hammel, Naama, Khachatryan, Naira, Sharpsten, Lucie, Medeiros, Felipe A, Girkin, Christopher A, Liebmann, Jeffrey M, Weinreb, Robert N, and Zangwill, Linda M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Ophthalmology and Optometry ,Neurosciences ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Neurodegenerative ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Eye ,Black or African American ,Aged ,Databases ,Factual ,Early Diagnosis ,Gonioscopy ,Healthy Volunteers ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Fibers ,Ocular Hypertension ,Reproducibility of Results ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Tomography ,Optical Coherence ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Field Tests ,Visual Fields ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Ophthalmology and optometry - Abstract
PurposeTo evaluate and compare the diagnostic accuracy of global and sector analyses for detection of early visual field (VF) damage using the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) reference databases of the Spectralis (Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany) and Cirrus (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Dublin, CA) spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD OCT) devices.MethodsHealthy subjects and glaucoma suspects from the Diagnostic Innovations in Glaucoma Study (DIGS) and African Descent and Glaucoma Evaluation Study (ADAGES) with at least 2 years of follow-up were included. Global and sectoral RNFL measures were classified as within normal limits, borderline (BL), and outside normal limits (ONL) on the basis of the device reference databases. The sensitivity of ONL classification was estimated in glaucoma suspect eyes that developed repeatable VF damage.ResultsA total of 353 glaucoma suspect eyes and 279 healthy eyes were included. A total of 34 (9.6%) of the glaucoma suspect eyes developed VF damage. In glaucoma suspect eyes, Spectralis and Cirrus ONL classification was present in 47 eyes (13.3%) and 24 eyes (6.8%), respectively. The sensitivity of the global RNFL ONL classification among eyes that developed VF damage was 23.5% for Cirrus and 32.4% for Spectralis. The specificity of within-normal-limits global classification in healthy eyes was 100% for Cirrus and 99.6% for Spectralis. There was moderate to substantial agreement between Cirrus and Spectralis classification as ONL.ConclusionsThe Spectralis and Cirrus reference databases have a high specificity for identifying healthy eyes and good agreement for detection of eyes with early glaucoma damage.
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- 2016
4. Rates of Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thinning in Glaucoma Suspect Eyes
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Miki, Atsuya, Medeiros, Felipe A, Weinreb, Robert N, Jain, Sonia, He, Feng, Sharpsten, Lucie, Khachatryan, Naira, Hammel, Na'ama, Liebmann, Jeffrey M, Girkin, Christopher A, Sample, Pamela A, and Zangwill, Linda M
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Ophthalmology and Optometry ,Neurosciences ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Neurodegenerative ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Bioengineering ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Eye ,Black or African American ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Intraocular Pressure ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Fibers ,Ocular Hypertension ,Optic Disk ,Prospective Studies ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,Tomography ,Optical Coherence ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,Visual Fields ,White People ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Ophthalmology and optometry - Abstract
PurposeTo compare the rates of retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) loss in patients suspected of having glaucoma who developed visual field damage (VFD) with those who did not develop VFD and to determine whether the rate of RNFL loss can be used to predict the development of VFD.DesignProspective, observational cohort study.ParticipantsGlaucoma suspects, defined as having glaucomatous optic neuropathy or ocular hypertension (intraocular pressure, >21 mmHg) without repeatable VFD at baseline, from the Diagnostic Innovations in Glaucoma Study and the African Descent and Glaucoma Evaluation Study.MethodsGlobal and quadrant RNFL thickness (RNFLT) were measured with the Spectralis spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT; Spectralis HRA+OCT [Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany]). Visual field damage was defined as having 3 consecutive abnormal visual fields. The rate of RNFL loss in eyes developing VFD was compared to eyes not developing VFD using multivariate linear mixed-effects models. A joint longitudinal survival model used the estimated RNFLT slope to predict the risk of developing VFD, while adjusting for potential confounding variables.Main outcome measuresThe rate of RNFL thinning and the probability of developing VFD.ResultsFour hundred fifty-four eyes of 294 glaucoma suspects were included. The average number of SD-OCT examinations was 4.6 (range, 2-9), with median follow-up of 2.2 years (0.4-4.1 years). Forty eyes (8.8%) developed VFD. The estimated mean rate of global RNFL loss was significantly faster in eyes that developed VFD compared with eyes that did not develop VFD (-2.02 μm/year vs. -0.82 μm/year; P
- Published
- 2014
5. Factors Predictive of Remission of Chronic Anterior Uveitis
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Sobrin, Lucia, primary, Pistilli, Maxwell, additional, Dreger, Kurt, additional, Kothari, Srishti, additional, Khachatryan, Naira, additional, Artornsombudh, Pichaporn, additional, Pujari, Siddharth S., additional, Foster, C. Stephen, additional, Jabs, Douglas A., additional, Nussenblatt, Robert B., additional, Rosenbaum, James T., additional, Levy-Clarke, Grace A., additional, Sen, H. Nida, additional, Suhler, Eric B., additional, Thorne, Jennifer E., additional, Bhatt, Nirali P., additional, and Kempen, John H., additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Risk of Ocular Hypertension in Adults with Noninfectious Uveitis
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Daniel, Ebenezer, primary, Pistilli, Maxwell, additional, Kothari, Srishti, additional, Khachatryan, Naira, additional, Kaçmaz, R. Oktay, additional, Gangaputra, Sapna S., additional, Sen, H. Nida, additional, Suhler, Eric B., additional, Thorne, Jennifer E., additional, Foster, C. Stephen, additional, Jabs, Douglas A., additional, Nussenblatt, Robert B., additional, Rosenbaum, James T., additional, Levy-Clarke, Grace A., additional, Bhatt, Nirali P., additional, and Kempen, John H., additional
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- 2017
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7. Immunosuppressive Therapy and Cancer Risk in Ocular Inflammation Patients: Fresh Evidence and More Questions
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Khachatryan, Naira, primary and Kempen, John H., additional
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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