View clinical trials related to Optic Neuropathy.
Filter by:assessing the role of neuromuscular ultrasound in optic nerve involvement in systemic lupus patients.
This study aimed to investigate the therapeutic effect of subcutaneous erythropoietin in the management of late stage optic neuropathy.
The purpose of this research study is to better understand the impact of visual impairment caused by different eye diseases on the ability to perform daily activities and compare it to that in patients without eye diseases.
Biotinidase is an enzyme that recycles biotin, a water-soluble vitamin essential as a coenzyme for four carboxylases that are involved in gluconeogenesis, fatty acid synthesis, and in the catabolism of several branch-chain amino acids. Biotinidase deficiency (BD) is an autosomal recessively inherited disorder. Patients with profound BD (<10% of mean normal serum biotinidase activity) presents, usually during early childhood, with neurological (seizures, hypotonia, ataxia, developmental delay, vision problems, and/or hearing loss) and non-neurological findings (metabolic acidosis, respiratory difficulties, alopecia and/or skin rash) that may progress to coma or death if untreated. Three cases of adult-onset biotinidase deficiency with reversible optic neuropathy have recently been described in France, where there is no neonatal screening of BP. Once treated with Biotin, patients' vision was fully restored. This study aims to assess the prevalence of BP among a population of patients with idiopathic optic neuropathy, and to assess the efficacy of Biotin supplementation on visual impairment in these patients.
The purpose of the present study is to compare rates of glaucomatous optic neuropathy in professional wind versus non-wind instrument players in the Philadelphia Orchestra. A secondary objective is to evaluate intra-ocular pressure and choroidal thickness of wind instrument players under variable playing conditions.
When a patient with glaucoma who has a pressure that is too high and causing damage to their vision, despite receiving the maximum amount of medication that can be tolerated, the decision is made to have glaucoma surgery. Trabeculectomy is the most common form of glaucoma surgery used to treat open angle glaucoma. During trabeculectomy, an opening is created in the eye and partially covered with a flap of tissue. This new opening allows fluid to drain out of the eye bypassing the clogged drainage channels that are malfunctioning in patients with glaucoma. Studies have found that trabeculectomy significantly reduces vision loss and lowers eye pressure. However, many people need another trabeculectomy or other glaucoma surgery because the surgery may fail either early or much later because the body closes the drain created by the surgeon. The surgery is also less likely to work in patients with darker pigmentation, children who have congenital glaucoma, people with difficult to control glaucoma with new blood vessels growing on the iris, diabetes or persons with prior eye surgery. As a result, the investigators need to find ways to improve the longterm survival of trabeculectomy surgery in all patients.