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1.
Retina ; 44(7): 1134-1141, 2024 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38437825

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Long-term study to evaluate the clinical and surgical outcomes of scleral buckle (SB) surgery for primary rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RRD) at a large tertiary eye center. METHODS: Noncomparative, retrospective case series of 589 eyes of 569 patients with primary RRD who underwent SB surgery between 2004 and 2022 with a median follow-up of 6 months. The main outcome measures were best-corrected visual acuity, surgical outcomes, complications, and classification of RRD. RESULTS: At baseline, 447/589 (76.1%) round hole RRD, and 133/589 (22.7%) retinal dialysis RRD. Overall primary SB success rate was 83.7% for all retinal detachment subtypes, with round hole retinal detachment 84.8% and dialysis RRD 81.2%. Overall, the baseline best-corrected visual acuity was 0.42 logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) and the final best-corrected visual acuity was 0.26 logMAR ( P < 0.0001). In macula-off RRD, the best-corrected visual acuity significantly improved from 0.79 to 0.48 logMAR ( P < 0.0001). In patients with macula-on RRD, it improved from 0.19 to 0.12 logMAR ( P = 0.014). Binary logistic regression showed registrar surgeon grade (odds ratio [OR] 0.09, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.01-0.55), and partial or complete posterior vitreous detachment (OR 0.21, 95% CI 0.10-0.49) was associated with reduced odds of primary success. Higher surgical failure was associated with low pre-fellowship SB surgeon experience ( P = 0.024). CONCLUSION: Favorable visual and functional outcomes have been reported in a large series of SB for primary retinal detachment, mainly for patients with round hole RRD and retinal dialysis RRD.


Subject(s)
Retinal Detachment , Scleral Buckling , Visual Acuity , Humans , Scleral Buckling/methods , Retinal Detachment/surgery , Retinal Detachment/physiopathology , Retinal Detachment/diagnosis , Retrospective Studies , Visual Acuity/physiology , Female , Male , Middle Aged , Follow-Up Studies , Adult , Aged , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult , Postoperative Complications
2.
Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol ; 261(11): 3335-3344, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37535181

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Advances in artificial intelligence (AI)-based named entity extraction (NER) have improved the ability to extract diagnostic entities from unstructured, narrative, free-text data in electronic health records. However, there is a lack of ready-to-use tools and workflows to encourage the use among clinicians who often lack experience and training in AI. We sought to demonstrate a case study for developing an automated registry of ophthalmic diseases accompanied by a ready-to-use low-code tool for clinicians. METHODS: We extracted deidentified electronic clinical records from a single centre's adult outpatient ophthalmology clinic from November 2019 to May 2022. We used a low-code annotation software tool (Prodigy) to annotate diagnoses and train a bespoke spaCy NER model to extract diagnoses and create an ophthalmic disease registry. RESULTS: A total of 123,194 diagnostic entities were extracted from 33,455 clinical records. After decapitalisation and removal of non-alphanumeric characters, there were 5070 distinct extracted diagnostic entities. The NER model achieved a precision of 0.8157, recall of 0.8099, and F score of 0.8128. CONCLUSION: We presented a case study using low-code artificial intelligence-based NLP tools to produce an automated ophthalmic disease registry. The workflow created a NER model with a moderate overall ability to extract diagnoses from free-text electronic clinical records. We have produced a ready-to-use tool for clinicians to implement this low-code workflow in their institutions and encourage the uptake of artificial intelligence methods for case finding in electronic health records.

3.
Ophthalmic Res ; 66(1): 928-939, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37231984

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Accurate assignment of procedural codes has important medico-legal, academic, and economic purposes for healthcare providers. Procedural coding requires accurate documentation and exhaustive manual labour to interpret complex operation notes. Ophthalmology operation notes are highly specialised making the process time-consuming and challenging to implement. This study aimed to develop natural language processing (NLP) models trained by medical professionals to assign procedural codes based on the surgical report. The automation and accuracy of these models can reduce burden on healthcare providers and generate reimbursements that reflect the operation performed. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of ophthalmological operation notes from two metropolitan hospitals over a 12-month period was conducted. Procedural codes according to the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) were applied. XGBoost, decision tree, Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT) and logistic regression models were developed for classification experiments. Experiments involved both multi-label and binary classification, and the best performing model was used on the holdout test dataset. RESULTS: There were 1,000 operation notes included in the study. Following manual review, the five most common procedures were cataract surgery (374 cases), vitrectomy (298 cases), laser therapy (149 cases), trabeculectomy (56 cases), and intravitreal injections (49 cases). Across the entire dataset, current coding was correct in 53.9% of cases. The BERT model had the highest classification accuracy (88.0%) in the multi-label classification on these five procedures. The total reimbursement achieved by the machine learning algorithm was $184,689.45 ($923.45 per case) compared with the gold standard of $214,527.50 ($1,072.64 per case). CONCLUSION: Our study demonstrates accurate classification of ophthalmic operation notes into MBS coding categories with NLP technology. Combining human and machine-led approaches involves using NLP to screen operation notes to code procedures, with human review for further scrutiny. This technology can allow the assignment of correct MBS codes with greater accuracy. Further research and application in this area can facilitate accurate logging of unit activity, leading to reimbursements for healthcare providers. Increased accuracy of procedural coding can play an important role in training and education, study of disease epidemiology and improve research ways to optimise patient outcomes.


Subject(s)
Cataract Extraction , Ophthalmology , Aged , Humans , United States , Natural Language Processing , Retrospective Studies , Medicare , Machine Learning
4.
J Med Internet Res ; 25: e42789, 2023 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36881455

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Strategies to improve the selection of appropriate target journals may reduce delays in disseminating research results. Machine learning is increasingly used in content-based recommender algorithms to guide journal submissions for academic articles. OBJECTIVE: We sought to evaluate the performance of open-source artificial intelligence to predict the impact factor or Eigenfactor score tertile using academic article abstracts. METHODS: PubMed-indexed articles published between 2016 and 2021 were identified with the Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) terms "ophthalmology," "radiology," and "neurology." Journals, titles, abstracts, author lists, and MeSH terms were collected. Journal impact factor and Eigenfactor scores were sourced from the 2020 Clarivate Journal Citation Report. The journals included in the study were allocated percentile ranks based on impact factor and Eigenfactor scores, compared with other journals that released publications in the same year. All abstracts were preprocessed, which included the removal of the abstract structure, and combined with titles, authors, and MeSH terms as a single input. The input data underwent preprocessing with the inbuilt ktrain Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT) preprocessing library before analysis with BERT. Before use for logistic regression and XGBoost models, the input data underwent punctuation removal, negation detection, stemming, and conversion into a term frequency-inverse document frequency array. Following this preprocessing, data were randomly split into training and testing data sets with a 3:1 train:test ratio. Models were developed to predict whether a given article would be published in a first, second, or third tertile journal (0-33rd centile, 34th-66th centile, or 67th-100th centile), as ranked either by impact factor or Eigenfactor score. BERT, XGBoost, and logistic regression models were developed on the training data set before evaluation on the hold-out test data set. The primary outcome was overall classification accuracy for the best-performing model in the prediction of accepting journal impact factor tertile. RESULTS: There were 10,813 articles from 382 unique journals. The median impact factor and Eigenfactor score were 2.117 (IQR 1.102-2.622) and 0.00247 (IQR 0.00105-0.03), respectively. The BERT model achieved the highest impact factor tertile classification accuracy of 75.0%, followed by an accuracy of 71.6% for XGBoost and 65.4% for logistic regression. Similarly, BERT achieved the highest Eigenfactor score tertile classification accuracy of 73.6%, followed by an accuracy of 71.8% for XGBoost and 65.3% for logistic regression. CONCLUSIONS: Open-source artificial intelligence can predict the impact factor and Eigenfactor score of accepting peer-reviewed journals. Further studies are required to examine the effect on publication success and the time-to-publication of such recommender systems.

5.
Int Ophthalmol ; 43(4): 1127-1133, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36103103

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To determine the diagnostic value of 'soft stops' encountered during lacrimal syringing and probing. METHODS: Single-center retrospective review. Adult patients with epiphora attending a tertiary lacrimal clinic from May 2010 to April 2021 were reviewed. Cases with evidence of soft stop encountered during lacrimal syringing/probing were included, and patients with possible canaliculitis or a history of lacrimal surgery were excluded. Findings of syringing/probing consistent with pre-sac obstruction were correlated with dacryocystography (DCG) and surgical findings. RESULTS: 53 (10.2%) canalicular systems had soft stops on syringing/probing and were included in the analysis. The mean age of the patients was 63.8 ± 15.6 (range 28-87) years, and 27 (65.9%) were females. Intraoperative examination findings were available for 27 of 30 cases that underwent lacrimal surgery and DCG was available for 40 systems. Pre-sac obstruction found on syringing/probing was confirmed in 40% and 37% of cases on DCG and surgery, respectively. The correlation between syringing/probing and DCG was stronger for canalicular than for common canalicular location (p = 0.016). Canalicular stenosis on syringing/probing manifested as pre-sac abnormality on DCG in 5/7 (71.4%) compared to 0/6 common canalicular stenosis cases (p = 0.021). Based on the surgical findings, the false-positive rate of a soft stop on syringing/probing was highest for common canalicular 'stenosis' (100%) and lowest for canalicular 'block' (45.5%; p = 0.093). Findings of pre-sac obstructions on DCG were confirmed in 85.7% of the cases intraoperatively (p = 0.035 compared to syringing/probing alone). CONCLUSIONS: Soft stops on probing showed poor correlation with DCG and surgical findings, particularly in common canalicular location.


Subject(s)
Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction , Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases/diagnosis , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction/diagnostic imaging , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction/etiology , Dacryocystography , Retrospective Studies , Dacryocystorhinostomy
6.
Int Ophthalmol ; 43(2): 403-410, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36018419

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To assess the subjective quality of anterior segment photos taken from a smartphone camera adapted to the slit lamp compared to a commercial inbuilt slit-lamp camera. METHODS: Non-inferiority study. Five paired images of the anterior segment of normal eyes were taken using an iPhone 11 (Apple, Inc., Calif., USA) camera attached to a universal slit-lamp adaptor and a commercial inbuilt slit-lamp camera (Haag-Streit Diagnostics, Bern, Switzerland). Images were collated into a survey in which ophthalmology students, residents, registrars, and consultants participated to select the image taken from the inbuilt slit-lamp camera. If the image quality was subjectively indistinguishable, we expected a 50:50 split for each photograph that was presented. We selected a 10% non-inferiority margin, with the hypothesis that no less than 40% of images believed to be from the conventional camera were in fact from the smartphone camera. RESULTS: There were 27 respondents in the survey: ophthalmology consultants (n = 7), registrars (n = 10), residents (n = 7), intern (n = 1) and students (n = 2). The mean correct identification across the respondents was 11.3 out of 25 (45.2%) images. Overall, the smartphone camera was non-inferior to the inbuilt slit-lamp camera (p < 0.001). The non-inferiority of the smartphone camera was significant for consultants (47.4%, p < 0.01), registrars (47.6%, p < 0.001) and residents (37.7%, p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Anterior segment images obtained with a smartphone camera were non-inferior to the commercial inbuilt slit-lamp camera. Smartphone cameras may be a non-inferior tool for communication of anterior segment images having implications for the ease of access to quality telehealth consultations.


Subject(s)
Ophthalmology , Smartphone , Humans , Photography/methods , Slit Lamp , Software
7.
Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol ; 260(9): 3037-3042, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35460361

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To elucidate the role of syringing in assessing nasolacrimal duct (NLD) stenosis and non-anatomical functional NLD delay. METHODS: Consecutive adult patients with epiphora attending a tertiary lacrimal clinic from June 2011 to March 2021 were reviewed. Cases with evidence of canalicular stenosis or other identifiable causes of epiphora were excluded. Following syringing, patients were investigated with dacryocystography (DCG) and dacryoscintigraphy (DSG). The sensitivity and specificity of syringing were evaluated using the combined findings on DCG and DSG. RESULTS: A total of 289 symptomatic lacrimal systems (197 patients; mean age 65.5 ± 14.9 years, 66% females) were included. More than one-third of cases with both normal DCG and DSG were noted to have some degree of reflux on syringing (specificity = 65.1%, 95% CI 50.2-77.6%). The sensitivities were considerably low for NLD stenosis (i.e., stenosis on DCG and delay on DSG) and for functional NLD delay (i.e., normal DCG and delay on DSG), of which 43.7% (95% CI 32.2-55.9%) and 54.3% (95% CI 45.7-62.7%) had full patency on syringing, respectively (p = 0.17). CONCLUSIONS: Full patency on syringing was unreliable for ruling out NLD stenosis and functional delay. Furthermore, a positive syringing may be associated with functional NLD delay and cannot reliably differentiate it from stenosis.


Subject(s)
Dacryocystorhinostomy , Lacrimal Apparatus , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction , Nasolacrimal Duct , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Constriction, Pathologic , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reproducibility of Results
8.
Ophthalmic Plast Reconstr Surg ; 38(6): 567-570, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35502798

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To elucidate whether the specific cause of nasolacrimal duct drainage impairment impacts the severity, symptoms, and implications on visual tasks and quality of life (QOL) in epiphora. METHODS: A retrospective review of consecutive adult patients with epiphora attending a tertiary lacrimal clinic from June 2011 to March 2021 was conducted. Cases with evidence of canalicular stenosis, a mucocele, or other identifiable causes of epiphora were excluded. A structured interview assessed the epiphora severity (Munk), symptomatology, precipitating factors, and effects on visual tasks and QOL. Following lacrimal syringing, all eyes were investigated with dacryocystography and dacryoscintigraphy. The domains of the interview were compared between nasolacrimal duct obstruction (NLDO), stenosis (NLDS), and nonanatomical functional delay (FNLDO). RESULTS: One hundred twenty-two symptomatic eyes (63 patients; mean age 63.3 ± 17.2 years; 59% females) were included. There was no difference in Munk score between the groups (NLDO = 3.71 ± 0.18, NLDS = 3.79 ± 2.0, FNLDO = 3.85 ± 0.15; p = 0.82). In all 3 groups, most cases had a Munk >2 (86.8%, 75.9%, and 89.1%, respectively; p = 0.25). Discharge was more common in NLDO (65.7%) compared with NLDS (30.0%) and FNLDO (36.4%, p = 0.006). Worsening in the cold/wind was more frequent in FNLDO (77.1%) compared with NLDO (48.5%, p = 0.029). Effects on visual tasks and QOL were not significantly different. CONCLUSIONS: FNLDO patients experience a high severity of epiphora, comparable to patients with NLDS and those with complete NLDO. The distinction between FNLDO and NLDS had little consequence on reported symptoms, precipitating factors, visual tasks, and QOL. Discharge may be more specific to NLDO, whereas precipitating cold or wind is more specific to FNLDO.


Subject(s)
Dacryocystorhinostomy , Lacrimal Apparatus , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction , Nasolacrimal Duct , Adult , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Male , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction/diagnosis , Quality of Life , Constriction, Pathologic
9.
Orbit ; 41(6): 797-801, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34107855

ABSTRACT

Adenoid cystic carcinoma (AdCC) is a rare epithelial neoplasm of the head and neck, most commonly found in the salivary glands. Orbital AdCC is an uncommon clinical entity arising from the lacrimal glands, however primary orbital AdCC has been previously described in a small number of case reports. The exact origin of the neoplasm with uninvolved lacrimal gland in the orbit is unknown, however it may arise from ectopic lacrimal or salivary gland tissue, or extension from nearby epithelial structures. We describe the clinical characteristics, investigations and management of a 55-year-old man presenting with vertical diplopia, found to have left posterior orbital AdCC invading the skull base with intracranial extension involving the inferotemporal fossa, pterygopalatine fossa, left carotid artery, cavernous sinus and temporal lobe dura, without clinical or radiological lacrimal gland involvement or systemic metastases.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Adenoid Cystic , Cavernous Sinus , Lacrimal Apparatus , Male , Humans , Middle Aged , Carcinoma, Adenoid Cystic/diagnostic imaging , Carcinoma, Adenoid Cystic/surgery , Carcinoma, Adenoid Cystic/pathology , Lacrimal Apparatus/diagnostic imaging , Lacrimal Apparatus/pathology , Cavernous Sinus/pathology , Radiography
10.
Oecologia ; 195(1): 93-103, 2021 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33269409

ABSTRACT

Geographical limits of species' distributions are assumed to be coincident with ecological margins, although this assumption might not always be true. Indeed, harsh environments such as Alpine and Mediterranean ecosystems may favour high phenotypic variability among populations, especially those in peripheral sites. Floral traits are often found to be less variable and less affected by environmental heterogeneity than vegetative traits because variation in the former may have negative effects on fitness. For this reason, it is important to quantify variation in floral traits and plant fecundity in study range limits. The objective of the study is to examine phenotypic variation and differences in reproduction in endemic Lilium pomponium in the Maritime and Ligurian Alps in relation to environmental variation across its distribution range. In this species, marginal climatic populations occur both in the peripheral and central geographical locations of the distribution range; hence, geographical and ecological gradients are not concordant. Floral trait variation is related to local environmental conditions with an array of interactions among resource availability, potential pollen limitation and population size that are differentially related to floral traits. Contrary to the general expectation, all central and peripheral populations had similar, moderate seed production with each group limited by different factors acting on different stages of the life-history strategy. Our results are in line with the idea that general expectations are confirmed only when its assumptions are met and that the differences in pollination environment along an environmental gradient may not be the main determinant of the distribution limit.


Subject(s)
Lilium , Biological Variation, Population , Ecosystem , Plants , Pollination
13.
J Plant Res ; 129(3): 477-85, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26886434

ABSTRACT

Climate change is known to have a profound influence on plant reproduction, mainly because it affects plant/pollinator interactions, sometimes driving plants to extinction. Starting from the Neogene, the European climate was subjected to severe alterations. Nevertheless, several genera, including Berardia, survived these climatic changes. Despite the numerous studies performed about the relationship between climate change and plant reproductive biology, equivalent studies on ancient species are lacking, even though they may furnish crucial information on the strategies that allowed them to survive drastic climatic fluctuations. We investigated floral and reproductive features in Berardia subacaulis (Asteraceae), describing pollen vectors, capitulum and florets phenology, evaluating reproductive efficiency and defining the reproductive mode of the plant with bagging experiments and test of apomixis. B. subacaulis grows in habitats with low pollination services; it is self-compatible, but many typical features favouring cross-pollination are still present: florets are characterized by incomplete protandry, capitulum protogyny and high pollen-ovule ratio. The plant is not apomictic and self-fertilization is allowed within each capitulum. Similarly to other European Alpine endemics supposed to belong to the Mediterranean ancient tropical flora, the reproductive mode observed in the monospecific genus Berardia assured reproduction also under a pollinator decline. Differently from the other endemics, it took advantage of its spontaneous self-pollination and compatibility and its generalist pollination service, common both among high altitude plants and in the Asteraceae.


Subject(s)
Asteraceae/physiology , Climate Change , Ecosystem , Animals , Fruit/growth & development , Insecta , Pollen/physiology , Reproduction
14.
Semin Ophthalmol ; : 1-5, 2024 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38654615

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Lacrimal bypass is the creation of a fistula connecting the conjunctiva with the lacrimal sac or nasal cavity. Bypass is indicated in canalicular obstruction or agenesis; sac absence, destruction or prior excision; lacrimal pump failure; or dacryocystorhinostomy failure. We aim to review the various techniques that have been developed over the last century for lacrimal bypass. METHODS: We conducted a comprehensive literature review of techniques which have focused on creating a conduit extending from the conjunctiva or canaliculi to the lacrimal sac, or extending that bypass to the nasal cavity bypass. RESULTS: The main techniques reviewed include canaliculodacryocystorhinostomy, conjunctivodacryocystostomy, conjunctivorhinostomy, conjunctivodacryocystorhinostomy, and conjunctivoductivodacryocystorhinostomy. CONCLUSION: Lacrimal bypass surgery has evolved due to innovation in microsurgical techniques, instruments and materials. Conjunctivodacryocystorhinostomy with Jones tube insertion is the predominant bypass technique, reflecting a culmination of historical developments. Understanding the variety of lacrimal bypass techniques is important for exploring alternative options when necessary.

15.
Semin Ophthalmol ; 39(2): 158-164, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37697818

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate dynamic magnetic resonance dacryocystography (MRDCG) in eyes with functional epiphora. METHODS: We included prospective eyes with epiphora if no alternative cause was found on clinical examination, were patent on syringing, had no obstruction or stenosis on DCG, and had an abnormal DSG. MRDCG was performed to qualitatively assess for block or patency and quantitatively measure tear transit time. We compared measurements to asymptomatic fellow eyes and to historical reference values from asymptomatic eyes. RESULTS: We included 26 symptomatic eyes of 19 patients (median age 63 years). There was a block on MRDCG in 18 (69%) eyes and patency in 8 (31%) eyes. The block occurred at the sac-nasolacrimal duct (NLD) junction in 9 (50%), proximal NLD in 5 (28%), mid-NLD in 1 (5.6%), and distal NLD in 1 (5.6%) eye(s). No contrast was observed in the lacrimal system in two eyes. For eyes patent on MRDCG, median times to the sac, NLD, inferior meatus, first 25%, and first 50% of the fundus-to-nose distance (FND) were 22, 54, 118, 34, and 84 s, respectively. Times to the sac, NLD, and to fill the first 25% and 50% of the FND were significantly longer than historical values from asymptomatic lacrimal systems (p = 0.017, 0.050, 0.035, 0.017, respectively). CONCLUSION: MRDCG shows a high rate of block in functional epiphora. However, DSG and MRDCG results may not always correlate. The improved temporal resolution of this emerging modality may be advantageous in the critical first 2 min of tear transit.


Subject(s)
Dacryocystorhinostomy , Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction , Nasolacrimal Duct , Humans , Middle Aged , Pilot Projects , Dacryocystography , Prospective Studies , Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases/diagnosis , Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases/pathology , Lacrimal Apparatus Diseases/surgery , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction/diagnosis
16.
Eur J Ophthalmol ; : 11206721241249773, 2024 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38710195

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To develop and validate a deep learning facial landmark detection network to automate the assessment of periocular anthropometric measurements. METHODS: Patients presenting to the ophthalmology clinic were prospectively enrolled and had their images taken using a standardised protocol. Facial landmarks were segmented on the images to enable calculation of marginal reflex distance (MRD) 1 and 2, palpebral fissure height (PFH), inner intercanthal distance (IICD), outer intercanthal distance (OICD), interpupillary distance (IPD) and horizontal palpebral aperture (HPA). These manual segmentations were used to train a machine learning algorithm to automatically detect facial landmarks and calculate these measurements. The main outcomes were the mean absolute error and intraclass correlation coefficient. RESULTS: A total of 958 eyes from 479 participants were included. The testing set consisted of 290 eyes from 145 patients. The AI algorithm demonstrated close agreement with human measurements, with mean absolute errors ranging from 0.22 mm for IPD to 0.88 mm for IICD. The intraclass correlation coefficients indicated excellent reliability (ICC > 0.90) for MRD1, MRD2, PFH, OICD, IICD, and IPD, while HPA showed good reliability (ICC 0.84). The landmark detection model was highly accurate and achieved a mean error rate of 0.51% and failure rate at 0.1 of 0%. CONCLUSION: The automated facial landmark detection network provided accurate and reliable periocular measurements. This may help increase the objectivity of periocular measurements in the clinic and may facilitate remote assessment of patients with tele-health.

17.
Eye (Lond) ; 37(4): 760-763, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35397663

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To ascertain the success of endo-DCR in nasolacrimal duct stenosis (NLDS) versus nasolacrimal duct obstruction (NLDO). METHODS: Consecutive adult patients with epiphora attending a tertiary lacrimal clinic from February 2012 to February 2021 were reviewed. NLDS was diagnosed by patent lacrimal syringing and combined dacryocystography (NLD stenosis) and dacryoscintigraphy (post-sac delay) findings in all eyes. Cases with evidence of canalicular stenosis or other identifiable causes of epiphora were excluded. The epiphora resolution and improvement rates following endo-DCR were compared between NLDS and complete NLDO cases. RESULTS: DCRs in 24 NLDS (23 patients, 69.6% females, mean age 61.0 ± 17.07) and 58 NLDO (56 patients, 69.6% females, mean age 61.9 ± 17.4) were included. Resolution of epiphora was achieved in 10 (41.7% [95% CI 0.24-0.61]) of the NLDS cases compared to 40 (69.0% [95% CI 0.56-0.79]) in NLDO (p = 0.021). Improvement of epiphora (i.e., either improvement or resolution) was noted in 17 (70.8% [95% CI 0.51-0.85]) of NLDS and 53 (91.4% [95% CI 0.81-0.96]) of NLDO cases (p = 0.034). Three patients (12.5%) with NLDS had subsequent lacrimal procedures (one DCR revision, two Jones tube) at a median of 14 (range 11-21) months. 71.4% of the NLDS patients responded to a phone questionnaire at a median of 93 months postoperatively. Of these, 46.7% reported resolution or significant improvement, and 33.3% reported slight improvement. 64.3% said they would recommend DCR to others suffering from epiphora. CONCLUSION: Endo-DCR may benefit approximately 70% of patients with NLDS. The success of endo-DCR in complete NLDO may be higher.


Subject(s)
Dacryocystorhinostomy , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction , Nasolacrimal Duct , Adult , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Aged , Male , Lacrimal Duct Obstruction/therapy , Dacryocystorhinostomy/methods , Nasolacrimal Duct/diagnostic imaging , Nasolacrimal Duct/surgery , Constriction, Pathologic/complications , Constriction, Pathologic/surgery , Treatment Outcome
18.
Ophthalmic Epidemiol ; 30(3): 293-299, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35819055

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate Australian age stratified nationwide trends in vitreoretinal procedures. METHODS: Nationwide retrospective analysis of vitreoretinal procedures in Australia over 2001-2019 using Australian National Hospital Morbidity Database for public and private hospitals. Age and gender-specific trends in selected procedures including pars plana vitrectomy for retinal detachment (PPV for RD), scleral buckle, intravitreal injections, and PPV unrelated to RD were analysed using negative binomial regression. RESULTS: Total included procedures increased from 8102 in 2001 to 136430 in 2019. Between 2001 and 2019, the incidence per 100,000 persons of PPV for RD increased from 7.5 to 20.7, whilst scleral buckling decreased from 10.5 to 4.0. Similarly, the incidence per 100,000 persons of PPV unrelated to RD increased from 18.4 to 67.1, and intravitreal injections increased from 5.6 to 446.0. The rate of scleral buckling decreased by 6% annually (p < .001), most pronounced in those 40 years and above. In contrast, PPV for RD increased by 5% annually (p < .001), also most pronounced in those aged 40 and above. PPV unrelated to RD increased by 7% annually (p < .001), and intravitreal injections increased by 21.0% annually (p < .001). CONCLUSION: Between 2001 and 2019, the rate of scleral buckling declined compared to an increase in PPV for RD. Our analysis suggests an increasing trend to PPV over scleral buckling for RD repair in Australia over the last two decades. Additionally, rates of PPV unrelated to RD and intravitreal injections increased across all age groups. Overall, these trends mirror those seen internationally and reflect changing practice patterns over time.


Subject(s)
Retinal Detachment , Scleral Buckling , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Visual Acuity , Australia , Scleral Buckling/adverse effects , Scleral Buckling/methods , Retinal Detachment/etiology , Retinal Detachment/surgery , Vitrectomy/adverse effects , Vitrectomy/methods , Treatment Outcome
19.
Eye (Lond) ; 37(17): 3629-3633, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37221360

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) has been found to identify changes in the retinal microvasculature of people with various cardiometabolic factors. Machine learning has previously been applied within ophthalmic imaging but has not yet been applied to these risk factors. The study aims to assess the feasibility of predicting the presence or absence of cardiovascular conditions and their associated risk factors using machine learning and OCTA. METHODS: Cross-sectional study. Demographic and co-morbidity data was collected for each participant undergoing 3 × 3 mm, 6 × 6 mm and 8 × 8 mm OCTA scanning using the Carl Zeiss CIRRUS HD-OCT model 5000. The data was then pre-processed and randomly split into training and testing datasets (75%/25% split) before being applied to two models (Convolutional Neural Network and MoblieNetV2). Once developed on the training dataset, their performance was assessed on the unseen test dataset. RESULTS: Two hundred forty-seven participants were included. Both models performed best in predicting the presence of hyperlipidaemia in 3 × 3 mm scans with an AUC of 0.74 and 0.81, and accuracy of 0.79 for CNN and MobileNetV2 respectively. Modest performance was achieved in the identification of diabetes mellitus, hypertension and congestive heart failure in 3 × 3 mm scans (all with AUC and accuracy >0.5). There was no significant recognition for 6 × 6 and 8 × 8 mm for any cardiometabolic risk factor. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates the strength of ML to identify the presence cardiometabolic factors, in particular hyperlipidaemia, in high-resolution 3 × 3 mm OCTA scans. Early detection of risk factors prior to a clinically significant event, will assist in preventing adverse outcomes for people.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases , Hyperlipidemias , Humans , Tomography, Optical Coherence/methods , Pilot Projects , Cross-Sectional Studies , Cardiometabolic Risk Factors , Angiography , Machine Learning , Cardiovascular Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology , Fluorescein Angiography , Retinal Vessels/diagnostic imaging
20.
Can J Ophthalmol ; 2023 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38114063

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate extraocular muscle volumes in thyroid eye disease (TED) patients with and without dysthyroid optic neuropathy (DON). DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. PARTICIPANTS: TED patients who had computed tomography of the orbits. METHODS: The extraocular muscles were manually segmented in consecutive axial and coronal slices, and the volume was calculated by summing the areas in each slice and multiplying by the slice thickness. Data were collected on patient demographics, disease presentation, thyroid function tests, and antibody levels. RESULTS: Imaging from 200 orbits was evaluated. The medial rectus, lateral rectus, superior muscle group, inferior rectus, and superior oblique volumes were significantly greater in orbits with DON compared with TED orbits without DON (p < 0.01 for all). There was no significant difference in the inferior oblique muscle volume (p = 0.19). Increase in volume of the superior oblique muscle showed the highest odds for DON. Each 100 m3 increase in superior oblique, lateral rectus, inferior rectus, medial rectus, and superior muscle group volume was associated with 1.58, 1.25, 1.20, 1.16, and 1.14 times increased odds of DON. CONCLUSION: All extraocular muscle volumes except for the inferior oblique were significantly greater in DON patients. Superior oblique enlargement was associated with the highest odds of DON, suggesting superior oblique enlargement to be a novel marker of DON.

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