학술논문

Clinical characteristics of eyes demonstrating atypical patterns in scanning laser polarimetry.
Document Type
Article
Source
Eye. Nov2008, Vol. 22 Issue 11, p1378-1383. 6p. 1 Color Photograph, 2 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*GLAUCOMA
*TREATMENT of eye diseases
*DOUBLE refraction
*POLARIMETRY
*OPTICAL measurements
*EQUIPMENT & supplies
Language
ISSN
0950-222X
Abstract
PurposeTo characterize which clinical features are associated with the occurrence of atypical birefringence patterns (ABP) occasionally seen with scanning laser polarimetry (SLP).MethodsSixty-one subjects, including glaucoma patients, glaucoma suspects, and normal subjects, underwent a full clinical examination, standard visual field (VF) test, and a GDx-VCC SLP examination. One eye was selected from each patient. The magnitude of ABP was determined in two independent ways: using a support vector machine analysis (typical scan score (TSS)) and by a masked experienced observer. We assessed whether the magnitude of ABP was correlated with age, gender, the refractive state of the eye, corneal polarization axis and magnitude, GDx global parameters (TSNIT and NFI), and the VF status, as evident from glaucoma hemifield test (GHT), mean deviation (MD), and the pattern standard deviation (PSD).ResultsOf the 61 study eyes, 27 (44%) showed an ABP, based on a TSS cutoff (<82.5). A very high correlation was found between the TSS score and the masked experienced observer score (r2=0.80; P<0.001). The following clinical parameters were found, on bivariate analysis, to be significantly correlated with the presence of an ABP: age (r2=0.086; P=0.02); corneal polarization magnitude (r2=0.069; P=0.04); TSNIT (r2=0.16; P<0.001).ConclusionThe presence and magnitude of ABP did not seem to be closely correlated with most clinical parameters. A low, but statistically significant, correlation was found for age and corneal polarization magnitude (r2=0.086 and 0.069, respectively). A low–medium correlation was found for TSNIT (r2=0.16); however, we speculate that this might represent a confounding effect, rather than an underlying association. We conclude that none of the clinical parameters investigated in this study appears to be strongly correlated with the presence of an ABP on SLP scans performed using the commercially available GDx-VCC.Eye (2008) 22, 1378–1383; doi:10.1038/sj.eye.6702897; published online 13 July 2007 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]