Impact of diabetes on glaucoma screening using frequency-doubling perimetry
Autor: | Michelle Q. Lai, Tony Realini, Laurie Barber |
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Rok vydání: | 2004 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Eye disease Vision Disorders Glaucoma Physical examination Diabetes Complications Vision Screening Predictive Value of Tests Ophthalmology Diabetes mellitus medicine Humans False Positive Reactions Aged Diabetic Retinopathy medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Reproducibility of Results Diabetic retinopathy Middle Aged medicine.disease Test (assessment) Predictive value of tests Visual Field Tests Observational study Female Visual Fields business |
Zdroj: | Ophthalmology. 111(11) |
ISSN: | 1549-4713 |
Popis: | Purpose To determine whether diabetes is a potential source of abnormal test results in glaucoma screening by use of frequency-doubling perimetry. Design Observational case series. Participants and controls Twenty-five patients with diabetes and 25 nondiabetic normal controls, all without cataract or glaucoma. Methods Frequency-doubling perimetry using the C-20-5 screening mode was performed in 1 randomly selected eye of each participant. Abnormal test results were immediately repeated to reduce artifacts caused by test inexperience. Frequency-doubling technology (FDT) results were assigned a numerical score between 0 (normal) and 87 (no stimuli detected). Main outcome measure Abnormal FDT test scores. Results Overall, 7 of 25 (28%) patients with diabetes and 1 of 25 (4%) normal controls had an abnormal test; the 1 normal subject with an abnormal test was subsequently determined to have an abnormal glucose tolerance test. Four of the 7 patients with diabetes with abnormal FDT tests had no evidence of diabetic retinopathy on clinical examination. Patients with diabetes had higher test scores than normal controls (8.9±16.9 vs. 1.0±4.4, P = 0.028) and had longer test times than normal controls (66.4±35.5 seconds vs. 48.3±11.2 seconds, P = 0.019). Conclusions Frequency-doubling perimetry is abnormal in some patients with diabetes, including some patients with diabetes without clinical evidence of diabetic retinopathy. Abnormal FDT testing in diabetic eyes may not represent glaucomatous visual field loss. Diabetes may be a source of "false-positive" test results when this technology is used for glaucoma screening. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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