Abstract
PURPOSE: To present a revised interpretation of the work-up data that enabled diagnosis of preperimetric glaucoma (PPG) at the first examination.METHODS: a) Literature analysis on PPG; b) 6-year follow-up of a glaucoma-suspect patient.RESULTS: TWO NEW CONCEPTS MAY BE ADAPTED: (a) the objective finding of retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thinning below the normal border in the opposing typical glaucoma locations, the inferior and superior quadrants, and in a non-diffuse pattern, appears asymptomatically and simultaneously only in glaucoma; and (b) the imaging-related RNFL thickness may be considered the reference glaucoma standard, whereas the suspicious early glaucomatous optic neuropathy, having a potential diagnostic inaccuracy, would serve as a complementary revealing finding. That approach enabled, in retrospect, a first-visit diagnosis of low-tension PPG in the patient. Diagnosis was confirmed after 6 years, when cecocentral scotoma and further RNFL thinning emerged despite treatment.CONCLUSIONS: A revised approach enabled PPG diagnosis during the first visit.
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CITATION STYLE
Ophir, A. (2010). First-Visit Diagnosis of Preperimetric Glaucoma. The Open Ophthalmology Journal, 4(1), 22–27. https://doi.org/10.2174/1874364101004010022
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