Archive for the ‘Education / Tools’ category

(eye)’m Inspired Campaign – An Inside Look Behind Eyewear Inspiration

January 14th, 2012

Best Image Optical is introducing the (eye)’m inspired campaign. This campaign will run exclusively online and will showcase the artful thought process behind designing a frame. The (eye)’m inspired blog series will give the reader an inside look of the inspiration behind a frame shape or color.

Marketing Manager, Carlos A. Zamora has this to say, “We take pride in the art behind the design and through the (eye)’m Inspired campaign we can showcase it. The inside look behind the frame will reflect the designer’s feelings, memories, and reflection just like a painter, sculptor, or architect.”

All detailed description of the inspiration will be featured in Best Image’s corporate blog (http://bestimageoptical.com/blog/) every two weeks and a shortened description will be featured through Best Image’s social media reach found on: Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, YouTube and Google +. An (eye)’m inspired video series will debut later this year.

 

About Best Image Optical
Best Image Optical is a seasoned design house and producer of eyewear. Their three collections (Dolabany, Mario Galbatti, and Plume Paris) delivers distinctive design and beyond trend styling. Continuously at the fashion boundary, but sane enough to make each style ready for the fashion forward consumer.

Their collections are a perfect balance of luxury and casual. The frame’s feature colorful and inspiring temples and impeccable details, in a range of boastful colors. Comfort and fit are integral to the design of all Best Image Optical eyewear. The look of each line is versatile while always maintaining a high standard of functionality and excellence. Most frames can also meet your customer’s progressive lens needs, without sacrificing style and functionality. The Best Image Optical collections have something for anyone possessing distinctive tastes in shapes, patterns, and colors that set these frames far apart from the rest.

bestimageoptical.com

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Tool Educates Employees on Their Risk for Vision-Related Issues

August 4th, 2011

Encouraging employees to take advantage of their vision benefit to promote eye health and optimal sight, Transitions Optical, Inc. has introduced an individual version of the Healthy Sight Calculator. The free, online tool allows users to calculate their risk for eye-related diseases and vision problems, and how much they could save – in time, money and sight – with the right vision care and vision wear through their vision benefit. Results vary based on the user’s age, gender and ethnicity, all of which impact risk for vision problems and health issues that can affect the eyes. The new tool can be used by employers to educate their workforce, or accessed directly by consumers at HealthySightCalculator.org.

“Most consumers miss the full picture of what the benefit can do for them – regular eye exams for early detection of eye and overall health problems, an up-to-date prescription to maintain productivity day-to-day, and eyewear features like UV and glare protection to preserve and enhance vision,” said Pat Huot, director of managed vision care, Transitions Optical. “The calculator helps tell the story of what you could be missing if you don’t care for your sight. It’s a powerful way to motivate more people to use their vision benefit and get the care they need.”

Transitions Optical developed the Healthy Sight Calculator with a team of experts through its Healthy Sight Working for You initiative, which aims to raise awareness about the value of eye care and eyewear available through a vision benefit. Contributors to the Healthy Sight Calculator include Kovin Naidoo, O.D., M.P.H., Ph.D., International Centre for Eyecare Education; Robert Pariseau, CLU, CEBS, Benefits Solutions Group; and Vincent Young, M.D., chairman, Division of Ophthalmology at Albert Einstein Medical Center.

How It Works

The Healthy Sight Calculator takes visitors along a path, helping them understand their individual risk and potential savings, while providing education along the way. Visitors to the calculator can watch a video setting up the importance of caring for their vision, or can skip immediately to entering their demographic information, including age, gender and ethnicity. With each selection, the calculator provides details on how their demographics impact their risk. Users are also asked to enter whether they have health insurance, because the calculator considers this when determining how much the individual could pay out-of-pocket in medical costs for different eye- and overall-health issues.

The calculator then provides an overview of the user’s risk for 11 vision-related issues in
three categories, showing where the user is at higher risk than the national average. Issues
covered include:

  • Vision Problems (Trouble Seeing Up-Close, Trouble Seeing Far Away, Eyestrain
    and Fatigue, Severe Headaches From Light and Glare)
  • Eye Diseases (Cataracts, Diabetic Retinopathy, Elevated Intraocular Pressure, Glaucoma, Macular Degeneration)
  • Overall Health (Pre-diabetes, Undiagnosed High Blood Pressure)

Sections specific to vision problems, eye disease and overall health delve more deeply into risk rates and associated costs – in time and money – that could be avoided for different issues with earlier and proper care. Users can click on each vision issue for more information, including helpful videos narrated by Dr. Young and interactive “vision loss” simulations that show what they would miss seeing if facing that issue.

The Healthy Sight Calculator then provides a summary of individual results, and offers a customized recommendation for next steps based on each person’s results. The summary can be printed out and shared with that person’s eyecare professional. While some recommendations are specific to certain conditions, all users are encouraged to find out what’s covered by their vision plan and to visit their eyecare professional. The calculator indicates that plans should include comprehensive, yearly eye exams and coverage of or discounts on lens enhancements (like photochromic Transitions® lenses and anti-reflective coatings) to enhance and protect vision.

“The vision wear side of the vision benefit is often underestimated in terms of what it can do for an individual from a savings perspective,” said Huot. “For example, research shows that employees could save as much as 15 minutes per day by avoiding eye focusing problems. The calculator shares what savings would be possible if you could gain back this time simply by wearing the right eyewear to reduce eyestrain and fatigue.”

The individual version of the Healthy Sight Calculator complements a version for HR professionals that assesses savings and return-on-investment possible for an entire workforce through a premium vision benefit. The HR professional version of the calculator can be found at HealthySightWorkingForYou.org/calculator.

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Prevent Blindness Enlists Kids In Battle For Eye Health

April 19th, 2011

Some 30,000 Chicago Public Schools students learned about eye health in a pilot program aimed to get children and their parents to take vision more seriously.

Prevent Blindness America, based in Chicago, gave the district 1,000 kits of its new Star Pupils eye-health curriculum for kindergarteners, first- and second-graders. With four 10-minute lessons, the curriculum is intended to be easy for teachers and straightforward for students.

Star Pupils is aimed at a perennial problem: An estimated 37.5 percent of kindergarteners, second- and eighth-graders fail mandatory vision screenings, yet many do not follow up with an eye doctor to get glasses or contact lenses.

“If children learn something in school, they will come home and bug their parents until it’s accomplished,” said Jacinda Adams, Prevent Blindness’ vice president of marketing and development. “We have several avenues to get to parents, and one we were missing was going directly to schools.”

Prevent Blindness officials hope young children will be a good conduit to their parents, who ultimately find the eye doctor, schedule an appointment, take the child to the doctor and pay the bill.

But officials at the nonprofit know from experience the challenge of reaching parents. Prevent Blindness gives vouchers to CPS students whose families can’t afford eye exams and glasses. Many vouchers are not used, Adams said.

Among youths, the most common eye problems are myopia and astigmatism, said Dr. Sandra Block, medical director of school-based vision clinics at the Illinois College of Optometry. Both conditions and far-sightedness, which is less common, can affect learning.

Children with myopia, or near-sightedness, have trouble seeing objects that are far away and may not be able to see the blackboard unless they sit in front of the classroom. About 2 percent of first-graders and 15 percent of high school freshman have myopia, according to the federal government’s National Eye Institute.

With astigmatism, the eye is shaped like a football instead of a basketball, causing images to appear blurry and stretched out. Children with astigmatism and farsightedness have trouble reading, may complain of headaches and may not do well in school, Block said.

“People really need to know how important eye care is,” she said.

Uncorrected vision problems can lead to long-term problems such as lazy eye, in which one eye is turned in and the other out, she said.

preventblindness.org

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Diabetes Veterans May Show Ways To Prevent Vision Complications

April 14th, 2011

Diabetes Affects the Retina

Over time, diabetes can wreak havoc on the body’s eyes, cardiovascular system, kidneys and nerves. A major study by Joslin Diabetes Center researchers, however, has found that some people who have survived diabetes for many decades exhibit remarkably few complications—a discovery that points toward the presence of protective factors that guard against the disease’s effects.

The scientists studied 351 participants in the Joslin 50-Year Medalist study, which examines people who have lived with type 1 diabetes for 50 years or more. Among this population, 43% are free from advanced diabetic eye complications, 87% from kidney disease, 39% from nerve disease and 52% from cardiovascular disease.

The surprising numbers of Medalists without complications “are strong evidence that protective molecular, physiologic or genetic mechanisms, in these fortunate individuals, fight against the toxic effects of high blood sugars over many decades,” says Jennifer Sun, M.D., first author on the paper published in Diabetes Care.

As a group, the Joslin Medalists are very careful about controlling their blood glucose levels. However, within a reasonable range of glucose control, the study found that freedom from complications does not appear to correlate with how well these unique people controlled the blood sugar levels that go awry in diabetes. This conclusion differs from results shown in every other major recent study of diabetes management.

Clues to this protection may be found in analyses of a family of proteins called advanced glycation end products (AGEs), which are increased by high blood sugar levels. In the study, subjects who exhibited two specific AGEs were more than seven times as likely to have any complication. But this study also demonstrated for the first time that a combination of two other AGEs is associated with protection against eye disease.

Additionally, the researchers found a group of Medalists, followed at Joslin’s Beetham Eye Institute, whose diabetic eye complications stabilized after 17 years at a mild stage rather than continuing to worsen as expected. This finding again indicated that protective factors are present in this group.

The Joslin Medalist study has gathered data on more than 600 people and is running a broad series of investigations into what guards so many of them from complications.

Moreover, these diabetes veterans can provide other important lessons, as Dr. Sun points out.

“Insights from the Medalist Study are great motivators for patients who have just been diagnosed with diabetes or are early in the disease, particularly younger kids and adolescents,” she says. “We can tell these patients that we encourage them to control their blood sugars and get their recommended diabetes care, because they can live many decades with excellent vision and the chance to avoid other severe complications.”

joslin.org

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Stem Cell Therapy for Age-Related Macular Degeneration a Step Closer to Reality

April 1st, 2011

The notion of transplanting adult stem cells to treat or even cure age-related macular degeneration has taken a significant step toward becoming a reality. In a study published in Stem Cells, Georgetown University Medical Center researchers have demonstrated, for the first time, the ability to create retinal cells derived from human-induced pluripotent stem cells that mimic the eye cells that die and cause loss of sight.

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of visual impairment and blindness in older Americans and worldwide. AMD gradually destroys sharp, central vision needed for seeing objects clearly and for common daily tasks such as reading and driving. AMD progresses with death of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), a dark color layer of cells which nourishes the visual cells in the retina.

While some treatments can help slow its progression, there is no cure. The discovery of human induced pluripotent stem (hiPS) cells has opened a new avenue for the treatment of degenerative diseases, like AMD, by using a patient’s own stem cells to generate tissues and cells for transplantation.

For transplantation to be viable in age-related macular degeneration, researchers have to first figure out how to program the naïve hiPS cells to function and possess the characteristics of the native retinal pigment epithelium, RPE, the cells that die off and lead to AMD.

The research conducted by the Georgetown scientists shows that this critical step in regenerative medicine for AMD has greatly progressed.

“This is the first time that hiPS-RPE cells have been produced with the characteristics and functioning of the RPE cells in the eye. That makes these cells promising candidates for retinal regeneration therapies in age-related macular degeneration,” says the study’s lead author Nady Golestaneh, Ph.D., assistant professor in GUMC’s Department of Biochemistry and Molecular & Cellular Biology.

Using an established laboratory stem cell line, Golestaneh and her colleagues show that RPE generated from hiPS cells under defined conditions exhibit ion transport, membrane potential, polarized VEGF secretion and gene expression profile similar to those of a normal eye’s RPE.

“This isn’t ready for prime time though. We also identified some issues that need to be worked out before these cells are ready for transplantation but overall, this is a tremendous step forward in regenerative medicine,” Golestaneh adds.

She explains that the hiPS-derived RPE cells show rapid telomere shortening, DNA chromosomal damage and increased p21 expression that cause cell growth arrest. This might be due to the random integration of viruses in the genome of skin fibroblasts during the reprogramming of iPS cells. Therefore, generation of viral-free iPS cells and their differentiation into RPE will be a necessary step towards implementation of these cells in clinical application, Golestaneh says.

“The next step in this research is to focus on a generation of ‘safe’ as well as viable hiPS-derived somatic cells,” Golestaneh concludes.

Other authors on the paper include first author Maria Kokkinaki, Ph.D., Department of Biochemistry and Molecular &Cellular Biology, and Niaz Sahibzada, Ph.D., Department of Pharmacology at GUMC.

About Georgetown University Medical Center

Georgetown University Medical Center is an internationally recognized academic medical center with a three-part mission of research, teaching and patient care (through MedStar Health). GUMC’s mission is carried out with a strong emphasis on public service and a dedication to the Catholic, Jesuit principle of cura personalis — or “care of the whole person.” The Medical Center includes the School of Medicine and the School of Nursing and Health Studies, both nationally ranked, the world-renowned Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Biomedical Graduate Research Organization (BGRO). In fiscal year 2009-2010, GUMC accounted for 79 percent of Georgetown University’s extramural research funding.

gumc.georgetown.edu

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Preventing PCO

March 16th, 2011

Cellular PCO
Source: Mostafa A. Elgohary, M.D.

Two or 3 years ago, people thought that posterior capsular opacification (PCO) had become a thing of the past. Although it’s less of a problem now, it’s still a significant clinical issue, especially with regard to the use of premium lenses and accommodative lenses. PCO is one of the limiting factors in the use of these lenses.

Patients with diffractive multifocal lenses are susceptible to very small amounts of PCO. Diffractive lenses divide the light into two foci, which means there’s only about 40% of light in each focus; therefore, the patient needs all the light he or she can get. A bit of PCO knocks that down considerably.

It’s a problem for accommodative lenses as well because when the bag fibroses, it seems to stop the lenses from moving. Of course you can’t refill the capsular bag with an elastic polymer because it develops PCO, too.

Lens Design and Surgical Methods

Fibrotic PCO
Source: Mostafa A. Elgohary, M.D.

At the moment, PCO is a multifactorial problem. In order to prevent PCO, changes in IOL material and design as well as various surgical techniques and pharmacological methods to remove or destroy lens epithelial cells have been prescribed.

A lens with a good, sharp square-edge profile is necessary to prevent PCO. My colleagues and I looked at the electromicroscopy of a lot of IOLs, and we saw that the edge profile varies. Some manufacturers make good ones while others don’t. That’s an important point because some lenses may be advertised as having a square-edge profile, but they’re not all equally effective.

Hydrophylic lenses have a poorer square-edge profile than those made of hydrophobic materials. We developed a technique to look at square edges with what’s called environmental scanning microscopy. You can look at a wet specimen in an electromicroscope in its natural state. We could image these lenses very clearly and measure the sharpness of the edge using dedicated software we developed.

Another factor that’s important in PCO prevention is having a 360-degree square edge barrier right around the optic. A lot of lens designs have a break in the barrier at the optic haptic junction and that allows cells to escape onto the posterior capsule. Everything in IOL design is a balance of the pros and cons. If we’re going to have a 360-degree square edge, it tends to mean the lens has to be slightly thicker, and that means we can’t get it through as small of an incision size. On the other hand, if we want a lens for a very small incision, the downside is we tend to get higher PCO.

In terms of surgical methods of PCO prevention, making the capsulorhexis slightly smaller than the optic of the implant is important. Over 2-4 weeks after surgery, the capsule fibroses and that fibrosis pushes the lens back onto the posterior capsule and creates a mechanical barrier on the posterior edge of the lens where the square edge barrier is located. It forms a sort of pressure barrier to the migration of epithelial cells. In addition, if the rhexis is asymmetrical or off of the lens implant, we don’t get the same efficacy in pushing the lens back against the posterior capsule.

Dealing with Lens Epithelial Cells

There are also pharmacological methods of dealing with PCO, although fundamental problems have been associated with many of them. One of the concepts involves locking up the lens epithelial cells in the equatorial capsule. The surgeon performs a posterior capsulorhexis and prolapses the optic through that or uses what’s called the bag-in-the-lens, a Belgian-designed lens. The rhexis has to be 5 mm in diameter, it has to be central, and there must be a concentric posterior capsulorhexis. The lens is placed so that both anterior and posterior rhexes lie in this groove in the lens, and these eyes maintain an entirely clear posterior capsule because there is no posterior capsule. However, a recent report by Liliana Werner, M.D., Ph.D., research associate professor, ophthalmology and visual sciences department, John A. Moran Eye Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, showed these go on to develop massive Soemmering’s ring. While the posterior capsule is clear, there’s a downside, so this is not the answer to PCO prevention.

Another concept concerns the killing of all the epithelial cells in the capsular bag using a device called the Perfect Capsule (Milvella, North Sydney, Australia), which is held over the capsulorhexis by a suction ring in the eye at the time of surgery. The inside of the capsular bag is isolated and then irrigated with a solution to kill the lens epithelial cells. Once again, although it sounds like a good concept, clinical studies have been rather disappointing. The lens epithelial cells are probably protected by remnants of overlying hydrophilic cortical material so things like aqueous solutions can’t penetrate. Two years after surgery, these eyes have the same amount of PCO as the control eyes.

The idea of removing all of the cells from the bag has also been explored using a variety of instruments and techniques. The problem here is that we have to remove the equatorial cells. If we just remove the anterior capsule cells, the eyes get more PCO. The reason for this is we reduce the fibrosis in the anterior capsule so we restrict the fibrosing force within the capsular bag. This means we don’t push the lens implant against the posterior capsule as tightly as we would with a fibrosed posterior capsule, so cells can get in and cause PCO.

The A.R.C. Laser (Nuremburg, Germany) is a new device developed for cell removal. It uses laser shockwaves, and we can blast all the cells off the capsule, so we end up with a capsule that is acellular as long as we can go around for 360 degrees and treat it all. It also seems to remove adhesion molecules. The technology sounds quite promising and clinical trials are ongoing in Germany at the moment. In theory, though, the problem with this focal laser treatment is if we miss a few cells, PCO could develop. Another problem is we don’t know if there’s any danger that the laser shockwaves could damage the iris or the ciliary body.

In Britain, my colleagues and I recently tested this cell removal idea by taking human post-mortem capsular bags and growing them in a new laboratory cultured model. It’s the best model that has been described so far and involves performing surgery on a human post- mortem lens and growing it in an incubator for weeks following the operation. What we showed was if we take a pair of eyes from the same patient, do the surgery, put an IOL in each eye, and kill all the lens epithelial cells in the fellow eye, 3 or 4 weeks post-op, we would see that in the control eye, the IOL is fibrosing into the bag, just as in a human eye. In the treated eye, however, the lens wobbled. This indicated that with the current lens design, we need lens epithelial cells there to fix and stabilize the IOL.

If we are going to kill all the cells in the bag, we have to radically change the design of the lens implant. There are some fundamental questions there, and no one knows what the long-term consequences of killing all the cells in the human eye are. Do we need the cell bed to maintain the collagen and the elasticity of the bag? Does removing these cells ultimately cause degeneration of the capsular bag?

New Ideas

Open-bag devices are a novel idea. Studies on the Synchrony lens (Abbott Medical Optics, Santa Ana, Calif.) have reported very low rates of PCO. It seems there’s a possibility that by keeping the capsular bag open after surgery and allowing circulation of aqueous into the capsular bag, we may be removing cytokines and growth factors and therefore we don’t stimulate the lens epithelial cells to proliferate in the same way.

There are a number of companies that are involved in making such devices, although it’s entirely experimental at this point. We will also have to see whether the Synchrony lens, when it comes into standard clinical practice, continues to have low PCO rates when it’s being used by a lot of surgeons.
With the other three approaches to dealing with lens epithelial cells all having fundamental problems, the idea of opening the capsular bag is different and worth exploring.

by David Spalton, F.R.C.S.
ESCRS Ridley Medalist David Spalton, F.R.C.S., St. Thomas Hospital, London, discusses current and future methods of PCO prevention
eyeworld.org

Editors’ Note: Dr. Spalton has no financial interests related to his comments.

Contact Information
Spalton: +44 020 7935 6174, practice_manager2@davidspalton.com


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Funneling Patients Toward Glaucoma Drainage Stents

March 11th, 2011

In the United States, drainage stents are fast becoming an important part of the glaucoma surgeon’s armamentarium. Both the EX-PRESS Glaucoma Filtration Device (Alcon, Fort Worth, Texas) and the iStent Trabecular Micro-Bypass (Glaukos, Laguna Hills, Calif.) are coming onto practitioners’ radars as potential options for their glaucoma patients—if not now then for the near future.

While both of these are drainage devices, they are very distinct, shunting fluid into different areas, according to Richard A. Lewis, M.D., Sacramento, Calif. “The iStent drains fluid into the canal,” Dr. Lewis said. “That is pending FDA approval—although it has the panel recommendation, the FDA hasn’t acted on that as of yet.” He described the device as very small and fairly straightforward to insert, with less trauma to the eye than with other stents. “There’s some good there,” Dr. Lewis said. “The bad is that we don’t get quite the pressure reduction that we do with subconjunctival shunts.”

By contrast, the EX-PRESS device drains fluid into the subconjunctival space. “It’s really a variant of a trabeculectomy that standardizes the hole,” Dr. Lewis said. “With a trabeculectomy we’re making a punch with a little hole puncher. With the EX-PRESS, we’re still using a hole punch, but we’re putting a stent in there, which drains into the subconjunctival space.” He finds this brings with it many of the same problems as trabeculectomy, including wound healing difficulties, hypotony, scarring, and fibrosis.
He sees the patient population for these two drainage stents as likely to be distinct. “The EX-PRESS could be used in any patient who needs a trabeculectomy, open or closed angle,” Dr. Lewis said. “The iStent could only be used in open [angle] glaucoma and will most likely be combined with cataract surgery.”

Thomas W. Samuelson, M.D., director, glaucoma service, and instructor, ophthalmic pharmacology, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, Minn., and attending surgeon, Minnesota Eye Consultants, Minneapolis, agreed that there is likely to be overlap between the two. “I think the iStent is going to be used earlier in the treatment scheme because it’s going to be used for early to moderate disease, at least in my opinion,” he said. “Although in the FDA clinical trial the iStent was used in conjunction with cataract surgery, and that’s probably going to be its biggest market, I perceive the possibility of using it outside of cataract surgery as well.”

Eyeing The iStent

A key benefit of the iStent is its minimally invasive nature. “The procedure has very low risk,” Dr. Samuelson said. “Indeed I think that the biggest risk will be that it doesn’t adequately control glaucoma so the disease will progress.”

Dr. Samuelson described the iStent as a titanium device that is 1 mm in length. “Contrary to what a lot of people believe, it’s not a tube, it’s more like a half-pipe,” Dr. Samuelson said. The device is designed with an open back so that none of the collector channels or drainage channels are blocked. “Aqueous goes through the opening and then it should have complete access to all of the collector channels,” Dr. Samuelson said. “It’s bi-directional, so once aqueous passes into the canal it can go either left or right circumferentially within the canal.”

Dr. Samuelson sees the design as very unique. “Other procedures such as the canaloplasty stent the canal open 360 degrees but don’t provide that direct pathway for aqueous to flow into the canal.”
The device is placed through a very small clear corneal incision. “You can usually do it through a 1.5-mm incision or less—maybe even through a needle tract incision,” Dr. Samuelson said. “It’s placed in Schlemm’s canal so it produces an open conduit from the anterior chamber into Schlemm’s canal.” Dr. Samuelson said one differentiating feature of the iStent is that it does not stent open the canal but rather provides a window through which aqueous flows into the canal. “Its circumferential extension is only 1 mm into the canal,” he said. “Keep in mind that the canal itself is about 36 mm long.”

One natural area of use for the iStent is likely to be in those glaucoma patients who are slated to undergo cataract surgery. “One of the things that makes it particularly appealing is that in the FDA trial there was no measurable reduction in the safety of the procedure when comparing the patients receiving cataract surgery plus iStent versus cataract surgery alone,” Dr. Samuelson said. “So we take one of the most successful and safest procedures with the most favorable risk benefit ratio and find that we do not adversely affect it by adding an iStent in any measurable way.” If adding the iStent to the mix during cataract surgery can make the patient’s glaucoma easier to manage, Dr. Samuelson sees it as beneficial to do so.

He points out that people have actually been moving away from the combined phacoemulsification trabeculectomy procedure for the opposite reason. “Adding a trabeculectomy to a phacoemulsification procedure adds considerable risk,” he said. “While it may lower pressure more, there’s definitely a subset of glaucoma patients, i.e., those with early to moderate disease, in which we don’t do them a favor by exposing them to that increased risk, unless they really need it.” By classifying the glaucoma as early to moderate as opposed to more advanced disease, he thinks that practitioners can effectively separate which patients can benefit from a combined iStent or a combined phaco trabeculectomy.
Outcomes with the iStent vary depending upon the patient and can be confounded by medication. However, in the recent FDA trial patients were required to be off of their glaucoma medication pre-op. “All of the patients went into the surgery with an average pressure of about 25 mm Hg on no medicines,” Dr. Samuelson said. “The average pressure post-operatively was around 18 mm Hg at 1 year on 0.4 medicines in the cataract only group and 0.2 medicines in the iStent group—a statistically significant difference.” As a rule, patients were less likely to need to return to medication on the iStent. “There were twice as many patients in the cataract alone group back on medicines compared to the group receiving the iStent,” Dr. Samuelson said.

Assuming the iStent nabs FDA approval, Dr. Samuelson envisions a possible way of expanding the device’s usefulness. “There may be other applications for the iStent such as use of multiple stents,” he said. “There is work in Canada by Iqbal (Ike) K. Ahmed, M.D., [assistant professor, University of Toronto, Toronto] that shows that using more than one stent may obtain lower pressures. I don’t think that we’re going to compromise safety by adding additional stents.” Dr. Samuelson thinks that if the use of multiple iStents proves to be safe and minimally invasive while further lowering pressure, that will expand indications to a higher percentage of patients with glaucoma.

Dr. Samuelson sees the EX-PRESS shunt as a more precise, less invasive, safer trabeculectomy. “At least initially I don’t see these two stents as competing for the same patient population,” he said. “I see the iStent being for early to moderate disease and the Ex-PRESS as a very useful adjunct to trabeculectomy for patients with more advanced disease.”

On The EX-PRESS Track

Robert D. Fechtner, M.D., professor of ophthalmology, Institute of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, New Jersey Medical School, University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, N.J., described the EX-PRESS as a small, stainless steel device that has a narrow aperture to provide some resistance to flow through the device. “It replaces one step of the trabeculectomy procedure,” he said.

With a full-fledged trabeculectomy, after the flap is created the surgeon enters the eye and removes partial thickness cornea 0.5 mm to 1 mm or more. “This essentially creates a zero resistance channel to outflow and allows the eye pressure to drop to near atmospheric pressure,” Dr. Fechtner said. “We then restore resistance by suturing the flap in place.”

Use of the EX-PRESS standardizes one part of the procedure. “Once the flap is created, we enter under the flap with a small needle, typically 25-27-gauge, and insert the EX-PRESS device, which functions as a very small aperture with some resistance,” Dr. Fechtner said. “We then provide additional resistance with the scleral flap, much as we do in trabeculectomy.”

Dr. Fechtner finds that the key differences for the surgeon and the patient are the relatively non-invasiveness of the paracentesis and the small needle entry. The rest of the surgery is extraocular. “When performing the EX-PRESS procedure, it is unnecessary and in fact not really technically possible to do an iridectomy,” Dr. Fechtner said. “This avoids many complications that might be associated with an iridectomy.”

It then becomes a question of determining for which patients the Ex-PRESS shunt may be preferable to a traditional trabeculectomy. Dr. Fechtner sees this issue of patient selection as a continuously evolving one for glaucoma surgeons. “We started out with Molteno tubes (IOP, Costa Mesa, Calif.) in our most complex eyes, and we now have a trab versus tube study suggesting that tubes might come very early in our surgical algorithm,” he said. “Similarly, I think that as we gain experience with the EX-PRESS and we accumulate knowledge about the results, we will have a better idea of where it fits and what the best match is.”

In Dr. Fechtner’s view there are a couple of types of patients for whom use of the EX-PRESS device is an excellent option. “The first obvious place where the EX-PRESS would be a good match would be in a patient who is at increased risk of bleeding,” he said. A second type of patient that he often selects for the EX-PRESS is one in which there may be concern of vitreous behind the iris and that an iridectomy would release this into the sclerostomy.

Malik Y. Kahook, M.D., associate professor, University of Colorado, Denver, agreed that the EX-PRESS device is suitable for the same group of patients who would otherwise undergo traditional trabeculectomy. However, he stressed that these are not the more extreme cases. “It’s not the patient population that has failed two trabeculectomies for whom you then go on to a glaucoma drainage device like an Ahmed (New World Medical, Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.) or a Baerveldt (Abbott Medical Optics, AMO, Santa Ana, Calif.). It’s also not the [early glaucoma] category, what we’re calling the ‘cataract plus,’ where we would use the iStent and potentially the CyPass (Transcend Medical, Menlo Park, Calif.),” Dr. Kahook said.

There are a few cases, however, in which Dr. Kahook finds the Ex-PRESS to be particularly helpful. “I use it for the monocular patient who needs quick visual recovery because in my hands, the EX-PRESS patient has quicker visual recovery than a traditional trabeculectomy patient,” he said. “I also use it when I’m combining a cataract plus a trabeculectomy.” He finds this to be a less traumatic procedure. “It’s a quieter eye because I’m not doing a peripheral iridectomy, I have more control of the anterior chamber, and I’m much less likely to get a shallow or flat anterior chamber post-operatively,” Dr. Kahook said. He also tends to use the EX-PRESS in those patients who are on anticoagulants. This way, he can avoid an iridectomy and is much less likely to have a hyphema.

Outcomes with the EX-PRESS are promising. Dr. Kahook recently conducted a study comparing the Ex-PRESS shunt to trabeculectomy, with results slated to come out in an upcoming issue of the American Journal of Ophthalmology. He found that the device offers similar pressure lowering to traditional trabeculectomy. “We compared trabeculectomy to the EX-PRESS with 2 years of follow-up and we found that the IOP lowering was roughly comparable to that of trabeculectomy,” he said. “They both essentially did the same and the pressure lowering was in the 11-13 mm Hg range for all patients.”

Dr. Kahook also found that the speed of visual recovery with the EX-PRESS outstrips traditional trabeculectomy. “We found that patients recover onto their baseline visual acuity at 1 week after EX-PRESS versus 1 month for trabeculectomy,” he said. Dr. Kahook attributes this more rapid healing response to a combination of things. “There is much less surgical manipulation with the EX-PRESS so you’re less likely to have corneal edema or uveitis post-operatively,” he said. “You’re also less likely to induce any astigmatism because it’s minimally invasive.” In addition, he pointed out that with the EX-PRESS the chances of complications such as hyphema are decreased, and patients are less likely to have very low intraocular pressure in the early post-op days.

Dr. Fechtner likewise has observed more rapid recovery with the EX-PRESS shunt, with pressure lowering equivalent to trabeculectomy. “I do think that vision is better early on, and my clinical impression has been that it’s easier to manage these post-operatively, as I have evolved into a better technique using the device,” Dr. Fechtner said.

Overall, Dr. Fechtner sees both the iStent and the EX-PRESS shunt as moving glaucoma surgery forward. “I think that we should be very grateful as glaucoma surgeons to see industry and fellow surgeons innovating,” he said. “We understand the problems with our current glaucoma procedures and yet we stick with them, waiting for something to offer advantages—any small advantage to me is a major step forward in glaucoma surgery.”

by Maxine Lipner
Senior EyeWorld Contributing Editor
eyeworld.org

Editors’ Note: Dr. Fechtner has financial interests with Alcon. Dr. Kahook has financial interests with Alcon and consults for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Dr. Lewis has financial interests with Alcon, Glaukos, iScience (Menlo Park, Calif.), and Sanofi-Avantis (Bridgewater, N.J.). Dr. Samuelson has financial interests with AMO, AcuMems (Menlo Park, Calif.), Alcon, Allergan (Irvine, Calif.), AqueSys (Irvine, Calif.), Endo Optiks (Little Silver, N.J.), Glaukos, iScience, Ivantis (Irvine, Calif.), Pfizer (New York), QLT (Menlo Park, Calif.), and Santen (Napa, Calif.).

Contact Information
Fechtner: 973-972-2030, fechtnrd@umdnj.edu
Kahook: 720-848-2500, malik.kahook@gmail.com
Lewis: 916-649-1515, rlewiseyemd@yahoo.com
Samuelson: twsamuelson@mneye.com


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Scholarship Alert: Varilux $1000 Student Grant

January 6th, 2011

Essilor of America and Varilux invite you to participate in the Varilux Student Grant Award program for 2010–2011.

Essilor has proudly sponsored this program for more than 25 years. This is only a small part of their ongoing commitment to optometric education, optometry students and the optometric profession.

Introduced by Essilor in 1959, Varilux lenses have gained worldwide acceptance as the first choice for the correction of presbyopia because they provide comfortable vision at all distances.

 

REQUIREMENTS

  • Program is open to optometry students who have experience in the clinic’s dispensary.
  • Students should submit case reports on patients fit with Varilux lenses to the school’s faculty and/or clinical staff who will select one submission.
  • Case reports can be submitted in printed form, on CD, or by e-mail to: dventura@essilorusa.com
  • Maximum length is 2000 words.
  • Reports should include patient’s old and new Rx, occupation, hobbies and any other pertinent information.
  • Student information must include name, address, e-mail address, telephone number, and W9 form (available at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw9.pdf).
  • Entries must be postmarked or received via e-mail by February 1, 2011

 

SELECTION
The clinical faculty and/or staff at each school will select one recipient based on the following criteria: Dispensing skills, application of Varilux lenses to patient needs, analysis of the case(s) and analysis of the lens design and lens performance (optional/extra).

 

AWARDS

  • The student with the selected case report at each school will receive $1000, plus an entry into national judging.
  • The national award winner and faculty advisor will each receive an all expense paid trip for two to Optometry’s Meeting® to be held June 15–19, 2011 in Salt Lake City, Utah.

 

QUESTIONS?

Danne Ventura, F.A.A.O. | Director, Professional Relations Essilor of America, Inc.
13555 N. Stemmons Freeway • Dallas, TX 75234 • (800) ESSILOR, x8669
dventura@essilorusa.com

essilorusa.com

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Singapore Scientists First To Perform The Largest Genome-Wide Association Study On Central Corneal Thickness

January 5th, 2011

A team of scientists from Singapore has discovered two genes from the collagen family which demonstrate strong association with Central Corneal Thickness (CCT). CCT is a risk factor of glaucoma, the most common cause of irreversible blindness worldwide.

The identification of genetic determinants affecting CCT in the population is crucial in helping to provide useful insights into the mechanisms underlying the association between CCT and glaucoma. This will definitely increase knowledge on the pathogenesis of glaucoma.

The study, the largest genome-wide association study (GWAS) ever on CCT and the first in Asia, was jointly conducted by scientists from the Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS), an institute of Singapore’s Agency of Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), the Singapore Eye Research Institute (SERI), the National University of Singapore (NUS), the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School, as well as colleagues from the USA and Australia.

Their research, published in Human Molecular Genetics, is the first ever genome-wide study of CCT conducted on Singaporeans on such a massive scale. More than 5,000 individuals were drawn from two ethnic populations in Singapore via the SERI-led landmark, community-based studies that systematically documented the frequency, causes and impact of low vision and major eye diseases in the different racial/ethnic groups in Singapore.

The two ethnic populations were the Malays and Indians, drawn from the Singapore Malay Eye Study (SiMES), which successfully looked at 3,280 of Singapore’s Malay population from 2004 to 2006, and the Singapore Indian Eye Study (SINDI) that examined 3,400 Singapore Indians between 2007 and 2009.

“GWAS have been conducted primarily in European populations, and an interest in the Asian populations is only just beginning to emerge. The Singapore population has, until now, been untouched by GWAS efforts. This is our first attempt at assembling a large sample from the Singaporean cohort”, said GIS Research Fellow and one of the first authors of the paper, Dr Khor Chiea Chuen. “This study shows that there is good reason to continue genetic studies on Singaporeans as some of the genes governing traits in Singapore Malays and Indians are very different when compared to that of Europeans.” He added, “To realize our aim at personalized medicine using human genetic profile as a guide, we have to conduct this kind of large-scale genetic studies in our own Singapore population to find the answers, as many European results cannot be generalized to Asians, let alone Singaporeans from different ethnic groups.”

Associate Professor Aung Tin, Deputy Director, SERI and Head Glaucoma Service, SNEC, added,

“Glaucoma is a major cause of blindness and central corneal thickness is a key risk factor for the disease. By finding genes related to central corneal thickness in our population, we are close to identifying genes for glaucoma and may one day be able to predict who is at risk of this major eye disease in Singapore.”

On a similar note, Professor Adrian Hill, Director of The Jenner Institute in the UK, also commented,

“This is an impressive large-scale study of one of the most important causes of blindness. The Singapore team provides strong evidence for the involvement of collagen-related genes in this disorder, opening new avenues for the understanding and better treatment of this condition.” “This was a very successful partnership between clinical research scientists with expertise in eye-related genetics at SERI and statistical geneticists with expertise in whole genome analysis at GIS” said Dr Eranga N. Vithana, Head of Ocular Genomics, Assistant Director, Basic and Experimental Sciences at the SERI. Dr Eranga further commented, “We hope to have many such research collaborations in the future with equally successful outcomes.”

gis.a-star.edu.sg | seri.com.sg

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A Cork In The Eye Is No Way To Spend The Holiday

December 30th, 2010

For many, the countdown on New Year’s Eve is a time to celebrate with friends and family and pop open a bottle of bubbly, but for others, it could mean getting hit in the eye with a champagne cork that could lead to a trip to the emergency room and even permanent vision loss.

“Champagne cork eye injuries can have a devastating impact on your vision,” said Kuldev Singh, M.D., M.P.H., clinical correspondent for the American Academy of Ophthalmology and Professor of Ophthalmology, Stanford University School of Medicine. “Eye-related cork injuries can lead to acute glaucoma, detached retina and staining of the cornea, all of which can result in decreased vision. Many champagne cork-related eye injuries necessitate urgent surgery to prevent significant, permanent vision loss — a terrible way to spend the holidays.”

A cork can fly up to 50 miles per hour as it leaves the bottle. “Incorrect popping of champagne corks is one of the most common holiday-related eye hazards. Anything that travels with such force can have a dangerous effect if it strikes your eye,” said Dr. Singh.

Every year, warm bottles of champagne, coupled with bad cork-removal techniques are responsible for causing serious, potentially blinding injuries. “If you follow a few simple steps to properly open a bottle of champagne, you can keep your holidays enjoyable and safe,” says Dr. Singh.

Here are some tips on opening a bottle of champagne properly:

  • Make sure sparkling wine is chilled to at least 45 degrees Fahrenheit before opening. The cork of a warm bottle is more likely to pop unexpectedly.
  • Don’t shake the bottle. Shaking increases the speed at which the cork leaves the bottle thereby increasing your chances of severe eye injury.
  • To open the bottle safely, hold down the cork with the palm of your hand while removing the wire hood. Point the bottle at a 45-degree angle away from yourself and from any bystanders.
  • Place a towel over the entire top of the bottle and grasp the cork.
  • Keep the bottle at a 45-degree angle as you slowly and firmly twist the bottle while holding the cork to break the seal. Continue to hold the cork while twisting the bottle. Continue until the cork is almost out of the neck. Counter the force of the cork using slight downward pressure just as the cork breaks free from the bottle.
  • Never use a corkscrew to open a bottle of champagne or sparkling wine.
  • American Academy of Ophthalmology

    aao.org

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