PD is not uncommon, and its effect on FFR-based decision-making was not negligible in the range between 0.77 and 0.82 where reclassification occurred in 18.7% of FFR measurements. (Circ J 2016; 80: 1812-1819).
Purpose Several studies have indicated morphological changes in the choroid in amblyopia cases. This study investigates whether choroidal vasculature was different among amblyopic and fellow eyes in unilateral amblyopia patients and healthy eyes, using en face images acquired via swept-source optical coherence tomography (SS-OCT). Design Prospective, observational case-control study. Methods This study included 14 consecutive patients with unilateral amblyopia and 22 age- and axial length-matched healthy eyes. Using SS-OCT, we obtained en face images of choroidal vasculature midway through the subfoveal inner and total choroid, corresponding to the vasculature of the choriocapillaris and Sattler's layer (inner choroid) and Haller's layer (outer choroid), respectively. We analyzed the en face images of the inner and outer choroidal vascular areas in 3 × 3 mm squares adjusted from 6 × 6 mm squares, using Littmann's magnification correction, after binarization of the images as a portion of the whole area. Results The outer choroidal vascular areas were larger in both amblyopic and fellow eyes than in healthy eyes (both P < 0.001), although there were no significant differences in inner (56.35 ± 2.46% and 56.27 ± 3.75%, respectively) or outer (61.49 ± 4.95% and 61.48 ± 3.73%, respectively) choroidal vascular area between amblyopic and fellow eyes (P=0.98 and 0.91, respectively). An outer choroidal vascular area of 59% was set as an appropriate cutoff value for distinguishing patients from controls. Conclusions The outer choroidal vascular area was larger in both amblyopic eyes and fellow eyes compared to healthy eyes. Our findings may help clarify the etiology of amblyopia.
Purpose
Since December 2019, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has spread rapidly across the world. During the pandemic, physicians in our hospital have had to respond both to the issue of treating the patients and the increasing domestic burden associated with social disruption. The purpose of this study was to assess how much the burden on our doctors, especially female doctors, was increasing.
Material and methods
The Physicians’ Career Support Committee in Sapporo Medical University conducted a questionnaire survey. The questionnaire inquired about a wide range of subjects with regard to working style and family life during the first and second waves of the COVID-19 pandemic, and was sent to all medical/dental physicians working in Sapporo Medical University.
Results
A total of 266 (42.7%) physicians in our hospital responded to our questionnaire and the data for 264 data were analyzed. The total numbers of males, females, and others, including those who did not want to specify, were 178 (67.4%), 82 (31.0%), and 4 (1.5%), respectively. Among them, 62 (23.5%) and 23 (8.7%) answered that their domestic burden was slightly or markedly increased. The increase in the domestic burden showed a significant difference between genders (p = 0.04). Even after correction for background differences using multivariate analysis, being female (p<0.001), having child dependents (p<0.001), and treating COVID-19 patients (p = 0.03) were significantly related to an increased domestic burden. Regarding family style, 58.1% of the physician-fathers were from two-income families (i.e., families with both parents in employment), and they answered that their partner mainly cared for the children. In contrast, 97.3% of physician-mothers were from two-income families, and 94.6% of the physician-mothers had to take care of children by themselves.
Conclusion
Physician-mothers are caught in a dilemma between an increased home burden and clinical duties in the hospital, with a significantly higher ratio than physician-fathers during the pandemic. As we showed, female doctors could have not continued their careers and take responsible positions in the same way as male doctors. This is a social risk in the timing of a crisis, such as a pandemic.
Diabetic macular edema (DME) refractory to anti-VEGF drugs is a socioeconomic burden. In this retrospective study, we investigated the relationship between DME remission and hyperreflective walls in foveal cystoid spaces, a novel finding on spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) images in DME. In a cross-sectional study, we assessed the relationship between hyperreflective walls in foveal cystoid spaces and other OCT findings in 110 eyes of 110 DME patients. Hyperreflective walls were delineated in 27 of 171 foveal cystoid spaces. Eyes with hyperreflective walls in foveal cystoid spaces had poorer visual acuity and more severe photoreceptor disruption than did those without such findings (P = 0.008 and P < 0.001, respectively). In the other longitudinal study, we evaluated the relationship between this finding and the remission in 54 eyes of 51 DME patients treated with as-needed ranibizumab injections for 24 months. Foveal cystoid spaces with hyperreflective walls were often persistent, and the cumulative rates of DME remission among eyes with and without the hyperreflective walls were 7.7% (1 eye) and 48.8% (20 eyes) at 18 months (hazard ratio, 0.092; P = 0.025). We characterized hyperreflective walls in foveal cystoid spaces and designated them as a predictor of no DME remission under ranibizumab injections.
Microcirculatory disturbance plays a pivotal role in the pathogenesis in diabetic retinopathy (DR). We retrospectively quantified the total counts and morphological features of intercapillary spaces, i.e., intercapillary areas and nonperfusion areas (NPAs), on swept-source optical coherence tomography angiography (SS-OCTA) images and to evaluate their associations with DR severity grades. We acquired 3 × 3 mm OCTA images in 75 eyes of 62 diabetic patients and 22 eyes of 22 nondiabetic subjects. In the en-face superficial images within the central 2 mm, the areas enclosed by retinal vessels were automatically detected. Their total numbers decreased in some eyes with no apparent retinopathy and most eyes with DR, which allowed us to discriminate diabetic subjects from nondiabetic subjects [area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) = 0.907]. The areas and area/perimeter ratios continuously increased in DR, indicating a continuum between healthy intercapillary areas and NPAs. The number of intercapillary spaces with a high area/perimeter ratio increased according to DR severity, which showed modest performance in discriminating moderate NPDR or higher grades (AUC = 0.868). These quantified parameters of intercapillary spaces can feasibly be used for the early detection of microcirculatory impairment and the diagnosis of referable DR.
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