1.Inter-eye Comparison of the Lamina Cribrosa Depth in Patients with Bilateral Normal-tension Glaucoma with Asymmetrical Damage
Jae Yeon LEE ; Payam Hosseinzadeh KASANI ; Sung Ok KWON ; Jeong-Ah KIM
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2022;63(5):446-454
Purpose:
To evaluate the association between lamina cribrosa depth (LCD) and the severity of glaucomatous damage in patients with normal-tension glaucoma (NTG).
Methods:
The optic nerve heads (ONHs) of patients with bilateral NTG showing asymmetrical damage were scanned using spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. LCDs were measured on ONH horizontal B-scan images at three locations equidistant across the vertical optic disc diameter and compared between the more damaged and contralateral eyes. Conditional logistic regression analysis was performed to identify ocular risk factors associated with more severe damage between the eyes.
Results:
One hundred and four eyes of 52 patients with bilateral NTG were included. The mean age was 66.0 ± 15.0 years; there were 31 males and 21 females. The more damaged eyes exhibited a higher baseline intraocular pressure (IOP) (p < 0.001), a thinner global retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (p < 0.001), and worse visual field mean deviation (p < 0.001) and a pattern standard deviation (p < 0.001), than the contralateral eyes. In contrast, we found no significant inter-eye difference in either the spherical equivalent or the axial length. The average LCD was significantly larger in the more damaged eyes (529.4 ± 116.7 vs. 482.9 ± 107.5 μm, p < 0.001). On conditional logistic regression analysis, the higher the baseline IOP (p = 0.006) and the larger the LCD (p = 0.003), the higher the risk of having more severe damage compared to the contralateral eye under similar systemic conditions.
Conclusions
The LCD was significantly larger in the more damaged eyes of patients with bilateral NTG, suggesting that LC deformation might be associated with glaucomatous ONH damage in NTG eyes.
2.Lower-Body Fractures and the Risk of Dementia:A Nationwide Population-Based Study
Jung-Kyeom KIM ; Sang-Won PARK ; Suk-Hee LEE ; Payam Hosseinzadeh KASANI ; Gi Hwan BYEON ; Yeshin KIM ; Jae-Won JANG ; Seo-Young LEE
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2024;20(2):208-213
Background:
and Purpose The association between physical activity and dementia has been shown in various observational studies. We aimed to determine the risk of dementia in the elderly with lower-body fractures.
Methods:
We reconstructed a population-based matched cohort from the National Health Insurance Service—Senior Cohort data set that covers 511,953 recipients of medical insurance in South Korea.
Results:
Overall 53,776 subjects with lower-body fractures were identified during 2006–2012, and triplicate control groups were matched randomly by sex, age, and years from the index date for each subject with a fracture. There were 3,573 subjects (6.6%) with and 7,987 subjects (4.9%) without lower-body fractures who developed dementia from 2008 up to 2015. Lowerbody fractures were independently associated with a subsequent dementia diagnosis with a higher adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) (1.55, 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.49–1.62) compared with upper-body fractures (aHR=1.19, 95% CI=1.14–1.23).
Conclusions
These results support the protective role of physical activity against dementia and highlight the importance of promoting fracture prevention in the elderly.