12 results on '"Iliev ME"'
Search Results
2. Correlation of visual function and morphology in human ocular toxoplasmosis
- Author
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Scherrer, J, Iliev, ME, Halberstadt, M, Kodjikian, L, and Garweg, JG
- Subjects
ddc: 610 - Published
- 2006
3. Korrelation von Funktion und Morphologie bei Patienten mit okulärer Toxoplasmose
- Author
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Scherrer, J, Iliev, ME, Halberstadt, M, Kodjikian, L, Garweg, JG, Scherrer, J, Iliev, ME, Halberstadt, M, Kodjikian, L, and Garweg, JG
- Published
- 2006
4. Comparative Study Between the SORS and Dynamic Strategy Visual Field Testing Methods on Glaucomatous and Healthy Subjects.
- Author
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Kucur ŞS, Häckel S, Stapelfeldt J, Odermatt J, Iliev ME, Abegg M, Sznitman R, and Höhn R
- Subjects
- Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Switzerland, Visual Fields, Glaucoma diagnosis, Visual Field Tests
- Abstract
Purpose: To clinically validate the noninferiority of the sequentially optimized reconstruction strategy (SORS) when compared to the dynamic strategy (DS)., Methods: SORS is a novel perimetry testing strategy that evaluates a subset of test locations of a visual field (VF) test pattern and estimates the untested locations by linear approximation. When testing fewer locations, SORS has been shown in computer simulations to bring improvements in speed over conventional perimetry tests, while maintaining acquisition at high-quality acquisition. To validate SORS, a prospective clinical study was conducted at the Department of Ophthalmology of Bern University Hospital, over 12 months. Eighty-three subjects (32 healthy and 51 glaucoma patients with early to moderate visual field loss) of 114 participants were included in the study. The subjects underwent perimetry tests on an Octopus 900 (Haag-Streit, Köniz, Switzerland) using the G pattern with both DS and SORS. The acquired sensitivity thresholds (ST) by both tests were analyzed and compared., Results: DS-acquired VFs were used as a reference. High correlations between individual STs ( r ≥ 0 . 74), as well as between mean defect values ( r ≥ 0 . 88) given by DS and SORS were obtained. The mean absolute error of SORS was under 3 dB with a 70% reduction in acquisition time. SORS overestimated healthy VFs while slightly underestimating glaucomatous VFs. Qualitatively, SORS acquisition yielded VF with detectable defect patterns, albeit some isolated and small defects were occasionally missed., Conclusions: This clinical study showed that for healthy and glaucomatous patients, SORS-acquired VFs sufficiently correlated with the DS-acquired VFs with up to 70% reduction in acquisition time., Translational Relevance: This clinical study suggests that the novel perimetry strategy SORS could be used in routine clinical practice with comparable utility to the current standard DS, whereby providing a shorter and more comfortable perimetry experience., Competing Interests: Disclosure: Ş.S. Kucur, None; S. Häckel, None; J. Stapelfeldt, None; J. Odermatt, None; M.E. Iliev, None; M. Abegg, None; R. Sznitman, None; R. Höhn, None, (Copyright 2020 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2020
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5. Macular thickness measurements in healthy eyes using six different optical coherence tomography instruments.
- Author
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Wolf-Schnurrbusch UE, Ceklic L, Brinkmann CK, Iliev ME, Frey M, Rothenbuehler SP, Enzmann V, and Wolf S
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- Adult, Anatomy, Cross-Sectional, Body Weights and Measures, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Retina anatomy & histology, Tomography, Optical Coherence instrumentation, Tomography, Optical Coherence standards
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare central retinal thickness (CRT) measurements in healthy eyes by different commercially available OCT instruments and to compare the intersession reproducibility of such measurements., Methods: Six different OCT instruments (Stratus OCT [Carl Zeiss Meditec, Inc. Dublin, CA], SOCT Copernicus [Reichert/Optopol Technology, Inc., Depew, NY], Spectral OCT/SLO [Opko/OTI, Inc., Miami, FL], RTVue-100 [Optovue Corp., Fremont, CA], Spectralis HRA+OCT [Heidelberg Engineering, Inc., Heidelberg, Germany], and Cirrus HD-OCT [Carl Zeiss Meditec, Inc.]) were used to assess CRT in both eyes of healthy subjects. Measurements were performed in two different sessions on the same day with each of the systems. From these measurements, the mean CRT was calculated. For the assessment of the intersession reproducibility of the instruments, we calculated the coefficient of the variation of test-retest variation., Results: Twenty healthy subjects were included in the study. Compared with the Stratus OCT all spectral OCT instruments showed significantly higher CRTs. The Spectralis HRA+OCT and Cirrus HD-OCT showed similar CRT values but significantly higher values than did all other instruments. The coefficients of variation for repeated measurements was 3.33% for the Stratus OCT, 0.46% for the Spectralis HRA+OCT, 3.09% for the Cirrus HD-OCT, 2.23% for the OCT/SLO, 2.77% for the RTVue-100 OCT, and for the SOCT 3.5%, respectively. discussion. The six OCT systems provided different results for CRT. The measurements with the Stratus OCT showed the lowest thicknesses, whereas those with the Cirrus HD-OCT and Spectralis HRA+OCT yielded the highest ones. These discrepancies can be explained by the differences in the retinal segmentation algorithms used by the various OCT systems. Whereas the Spectralis HRA+OCT and Cirrus HD-OCT include the RPE layer in the retinal segmentation, the other instruments do not. The data imply that the different OCT systems cannot be used interchangeably for the measurement of macular thickness.
- Published
- 2009
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6. Glaucoma phenotype in a large Swiss pedigree with the myocilin Gly367Arg mutation.
- Author
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Iliev ME, Bodmer S, Gallati S, Lanz R, Sturmer J, Katsoulis K, Wolf S, Trittibach P, and Sarra GM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Genotype, Heterozygote, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pedigree, Phenotype, Polymorphism, Single-Stranded Conformational, Prognosis, Young Adult, Cytoskeletal Proteins genetics, Eye Proteins genetics, Glaucoma, Open-Angle genetics, Glycoproteins genetics, Mutation
- Abstract
Aims: To characterize genotype, phenotype, and age-related penetrance in a Swiss pedigree with juvenile open-angle glaucoma (JOAG)., Methods: In a large Swiss family with history of glaucoma and 82 living members of four generations, we conducted molecular analysis and a detailed phenotype characterization in 52 family members. Mutation analysis was carried out using single-strand conformation polymorphism and DNA sequence analyses of the suspected candidate gene, myocilin (MYOC)., Results: We detected a Gly367Arg mutation in the MYOC gene of 13 family members. Nine of them (69.2%) had glaucoma: mean IOP 35.3 mm Hg, range 24-50 mm Hg; mean age at diagnosis 34.9 years, range 28-51 years. Two mutation carriers were glaucoma suspects, one (age 15) was unaffected, and one (age 16) not available for clinical examinations. Age-related glaucoma penetrance was 50% at 30 and 78% at 40. Untreated IOP resulted in rapid disease progression, whereas good IOP control, usually only by means of filtration surgery, could stabilize the disease. None of the wild-type members had glaucoma., Conclusions: This Swiss family is the largest reported Gly367Arg pedigree to date. The exact genotype and phenotype characterization allowed a reliable risk and prognosis assessment and targeted eye-care planning for the family. The study demonstrates the importance of genetic investigations in glaucoma families, carrying the potential of long-term socio-economic benefits.
- Published
- 2008
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7. Long-term outcome of trans-scleral diode laser cyclophotocoagulation in refractory glaucoma.
- Author
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Iliev ME and Gerber S
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Child, Eye Injuries complications, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glaucoma etiology, Glaucoma, Neovascular surgery, Humans, Intraocular Pressure, Male, Middle Aged, Ocular Hypotension etiology, Postoperative Period, Reoperation, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Glaucoma surgery, Laser Coagulation adverse effects, Lasers, Semiconductor therapeutic use, Sclera surgery
- Abstract
Background: Long-term outcome and complications of diode laser cyclophotocoagulation (DCPC) may be important, since eyes, once treated with DCPC, are less likely to be subjected to other types of interventions in the further follow-up., Methods: Retrospective review of 131 eyes of 127 patients treated from 2000 through 2004. Success was defined as intraocular pressure (IOP) at last visit 6-21 mm Hg; hypotony: IOP =5 mm Hg., Results: Mean follow-up (FU) was 30.1 (SD 16.7) months. Mean number of treatment sessions per eye was 1.54, 89% of the eyes having 1 or 2 sessions; overall re-treatment rate: 38.9%. Mean total laser energy delivered per eye: 133.9 (73.7) J; mean energy per treatment episode: 86.8 (22.0) J. Eyes with 3 or more treatments (11%) had a significantly larger proportion of post-traumatic glaucoma, and patients were significantly younger. All eyes had refractory glaucomas on maximal medication, neovascular glaucoma (NVG) representing the largest subgroup (61%). IOP decreased from 36.9 (10.7) mm Hg pretreatment to 15.3 (10.4) mm Hg at the end of FU. Success was noted in 69.5% (91 eyes), failure (non-response) in 13%. Hypotony occurred in 17.6% eyes, of which 74% had NVG. Hypotony developed after mean 19.3 (11.0) months, range 6 to 36; with 96% of these eyes having received only 1 or 2 treatments; delivered energy did not differ from that in the successful eyes., Conclusions: DCPC is an efficient treatment for refractory glaucoma. Hypotony, the most common complication, may develop as late as 36 months post-treatment. Diagnostic category and age seem to influence the outcome stronger than laser protocol and delivered energy.
- Published
- 2007
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8. Novel pressure-to-cornea index in glaucoma.
- Author
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Iliev ME, Meyenberg A, Buerki E, Shafranov G, and Shields MB
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- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Glaucoma pathology, Glaucoma physiopathology, Glaucoma, Open-Angle diagnosis, Glaucoma, Open-Angle pathology, Glaucoma, Open-Angle physiopathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Ocular Hypertension diagnosis, Ocular Hypertension pathology, Ocular Hypertension physiopathology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Cornea pathology, Glaucoma diagnosis, Intraocular Pressure physiology
- Abstract
Background: Several conversion tables and formulas have been suggested to correct applanation intraocular pressure (IOP) for central corneal thickness (CCT). CCT is also thought to represent an independent glaucoma risk factor. In an attempt to integrate IOP and CCT into a unified risk factor and avoid uncertain correction for tonometric inaccuracy, a new pressure-to-cornea index (PCI) is proposed., Methods: PCI (IOP/CCT(3)) was defined as the ratio between untreated IOP and CCT(3) in mm (ultrasound pachymetry). PCI distribution in 220 normal controls, 53 patients with normal-tension glaucoma (NTG), 76 with ocular hypertension (OHT), and 89 with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) was investigated. PCI's ability to discriminate between glaucoma (NTG+POAG) and non-glaucoma (controls+OHT) was compared with that of three published formulae for correcting IOP for CCT. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were built., Results: Mean PCI values were: Controls 92.0 (SD 24.8), NTG 129.1 (SD 25.8), OHT 134.0 (SD 26.5), POAG 173.6 (SD 40.9). To minimise IOP bias, eyes within the same 2 mm Hg range between 16 and 29 mm Hg (16-17, 18-19, etc) were separately compared: control and NTG eyes as well as OHT and POAG eyes differed significantly. PCI demonstrated a larger area under the ROC curve (AUC) and significantly higher sensitivity at fixed 80% and 90% specificities compared with each of the correction formulas; optimum PCI cut-off value 133.8., Conclusions: A PCI range of 120-140 is proposed as the upper limit of "normality", 120 being the cut-off value for eyes with untreated pressures
or=22 mm Hg. PCI may reflect individual susceptibility to a given IOP level, and thus represent a glaucoma risk factor. Longitudinal studies are needed to prove its prognostic value. - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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9. Visual function in human ocular toxoplasmosis.
- Author
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Scherrer J, Iliev ME, Halberstadt M, Kodjikian L, and Garweg JG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Vision Disorders diagnosis, Vision Disorders physiopathology, Visual Acuity, Visual Field Tests methods, Toxoplasmosis, Ocular complications, Toxoplasmosis, Ocular physiopathology, Vision Disorders parasitology, Visual Fields
- Abstract
Aim: To assess functional impairment in terms of visual acuity reduction and visual field defects in inactive ocular toxoplasmosis., Methods: 61 patients with known ocular toxoplasmosis in a quiescent state were included in this prospective, cross-sectional study. A complete ophthalmic examination, retinal photodocumentation and standard automated perimetry (Octopus perimeter, program G2) were performed. Visual acuity was classified on the basis of the World Health Organization definition of visual impairment and blindness: normal (> or =20/25), mild (20/25 to 20/60), moderate (20/60 to 20/400) and severe (<20/400). Visual field damage was correspondingly graded as mild (mean defect <4 dB), moderate (mean defect 4-12 dB) or severe (mean defect >12 dB)., Results: 8 (13%) patients presented with bilateral ocular toxoplasmosis. Thus, a total of 69 eyes was evaluated. Visual field damage was encountered in 65 (94%) eyes, whereas only 28 (41%) eyes had reduced visual acuity, showing perimetric findings to be more sensitive in detecting chorioretinal damage (p<0.001). Correlation with the clinical localisation of chorioretinal scars was better for visual field (in 70% of the instances) than for visual acuity (33%). Moderate to severe functional impairment was registered in 65.2% for visual field, and in 27.5% for visual acuity., Conclusion: In its quiescent stage, ocular toxoplasmosis was associated with permanent visual field defects in >94% of the eyes studied. Hence, standard automated perimetry may better reflect the functional damage encountered by ocular toxoplasmosis than visual acuity.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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10. Morphometric assessment of normal, suspect and glaucomatous optic discs with Stratus OCT and HRT II.
- Author
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Iliev ME, Meyenberg A, and Garweg JG
- Subjects
- Adult, Diagnostic Techniques, Ophthalmological, Female, Glaucoma diagnosis, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Ocular Hypertension pathology, Ophthalmoscopy methods, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography methods, Tomography, Optical Coherence methods, Glaucoma pathology, Optic Disk pathology
- Abstract
Aims: To compare morphometric parameters and diagnostic performance of the new Stratus Optical Coherence Tomograph (OCT) Disc mode and the Heidelberg Retina Tomograph (HRT); to evaluate OCT's accuracy in determining optic nerve head (ONH) borders., Methods: Controls and patients with ocular hypertension, glaucoma-like discs, and glaucoma were imaged with OCT Disc mode, HRT II, and colour disc photography (DISC-PHOT). In a separate session, automatically depicted ONH shape and size in OCT were compared with DISC-PHOT, and disc borders adjusted manually where required. In a masked fashion, all print-outs and photographs were studied and discs classified as normal, borderline, and abnormal. The Cohen kappa method was then applied to test for agreement of classification. Bland-Altman analysis was used for comparison of disc measures., Results: In all, 49 eyes were evaluated. Automated disc margin recognition failed in 53%. Misplaced margin points were more frequently found in myopic eyes, but only 31/187 were located in an area of peripapillary atrophy. Agreement of OCT with photography-based diagnosis was excellent in normally looking ONHs, but moderate in discs with large cups, where HRT performed better. OCT values were consistently larger than HRT values for disc and cup area. Compared with HRT, small rim areas and volumes tended to be minimized by OCT, and larger ones to be magnified., Conclusions: Stratus OCT Disc protocol performed overall well in differentiating between normal and glaucomatous ONHs. However, failure of disc border recognition was frequently observed, making manual correction necessary. ONH measures cannot be directly compared between HRT and OCT.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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11. Comparison of rebound tonometry with Goldmann applanation tonometry and correlation with central corneal thickness.
- Author
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Iliev ME, Goldblum D, Katsoulis K, Amstutz C, and Frueh B
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- Adult, Aged, Cornea anatomy & histology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Statistics, Nonparametric, Tonometry, Ocular methods, Intraocular Pressure, Tonometry, Ocular instrumentation
- Abstract
Background/aims: Rebound tonometry (RT) is performed without anaesthesia with a hand held device. The primary aim was to compare RT with Goldmann applanation tonometry (GAT) and to correlate with central corneal thickness (CCT). The secondary aim was to prove tolerability and practicability of RT under "study conditions" and "routine practice conditions.", Methods: In group 1 (52 eyes/28 patients), all measurements were taken by the same physician, in the same room and order: non-contact optical pachymetry, RT, slit lamp inspection, GAT. Patients were questioned about discomfort or pain. In group 2 (49 eyes/27 patients), tonometry was performed by three other physicians during routine examinations., Results: RT was well tolerated and safe. Intraocular pressure (IOP) ranged between 6 mm Hg and 48 mm Hg. No different trends were found between the groups. RT tended to give slightly higher readings: n = 101, mean difference 1.0 (SD 2.17) mm Hg; 84.1% of RT readings within plus or minus 3 mm Hg of GAT; 95% confidence interval in the Bland-Altman analysis -3.2 mm Hg to +5.2 mm Hg. Both RT and GAT showed a weak positive correlation with CCT (r2 0.028 and 0.025, respectively)., Conclusions: RT can be considered a reliable alternative for clinical screening and in cases where positioning of the head at the slit lamp is impossible or topical preparations are to be avoided.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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12. In vivo pachymetry in normal eyes of rats, mice and rabbits with the optical low coherence reflectometer.
- Author
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Schulz D, Iliev ME, Frueh BE, and Goldblum D
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- Animals, Biometry methods, Cornea diagnostic imaging, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Rabbits, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Reproducibility of Results, Ultrasonography, Cornea anatomy & histology, Interferometry methods
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine the central corneal thickness (CCT) in living rats, mice and rabbits using a non-contact, high-speed optical low coherence reflectometer (OLCR) mounted on a regular slit lamp. Both eyes of eight male Wistar rats, eight male balb-c mice and eight male Japanese rabbits were measured. Each eye was measured twice (one measurement consists of 20 scans), the average calculated. Additionally, CCT was measured in rabbits using an ultrasound pachymeter. The mean CCT was: RATS: 159.08 microm (SD+/-14.99 microm), MICE: 106.0 microm (SD+/-3.45 microm) and RABBITS: 356.11 microm (SD+/-14.34 microm). With the use of OLCR we were able to accurately measure the CCT of rats, mice and rabbits in vivo. This technique may prove useful in further refractive, pharmacological and glaucoma studies.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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