Literature DB >> 24299102

Measurement of the difference in intraocular pressure between the sitting and lying body positions in healthy subjects: direct comparison of the Icare Pro with the Goldmann applanation tonometer, Pneumatonometer and Tonopen XL.

Yaniv Barkana1, Shay Gutfreund.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Change in intraocular pressure is known to occur with body posture. Previously, markedly different estimations of this change were reported. The Icare Pro (Icare; Tiolat Oy, Helsinki, Finland) is designed to measure intraocular pressure with the subject supine. We compared the measurement of postural change in intraocular pressure obtained with this and 3 other tonometers: Goldmann applanation tonometer (CSO, Firenze, Italy), Pneumatonometer (Model 30, Reichert, Depew, NY, USA) and the Tonopen XL (Reichert).
DESIGN: Prospective comparative study. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-one healthy subjects.
METHODS: Intraocular pressure was measured in random order with four tonometers, first sitting then after 10 min of lying. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Average postural intraocular pressure change (mmHg) and the 95% limits of agreement for measuring postural intraocular pressure change between tonometers.
RESULTS: Average postural intraocular pressure change (lying minus sitting, mmHg) was measured highest with the Goldmann applanation tonometer (4.1 ± 2.6) and Pneumatonometer (3.9 ± 2.1), significantly lower with the Tonopen (0.9 ± 1.7) and was negative with the Icare (-0.9 ± 3.3). The 95% limits of agreement for measuring postural intraocular pressure change between Goldmann applanation tonometer and Icare, Pneumatonometer and Tonopen were -3.2-13.3, -6.4-6.9 and -2.8-9.4 mmHg, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Postural change in intraocular pressure was measured similarly, on average, with Goldmann applanation tonometer and Pneumatonometer, and much lower with Tonopen and Icare Pro. There was poor interdevice agreement in measuring this parameter. We observed high intersubject variability, suggesting the clinical importance of this measurement in the diagnosis and management of glaucoma.
© 2013 Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Ophthalmologists.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Goldmann; Icare Pro; Pneumatonometer; supine

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24299102     DOI: 10.1111/ceo.12272

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Exp Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1442-6404            Impact factor:   4.207


  8 in total

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Authors:  Aaron Y Lee; Joanne C Wen; Yue Wu; Ian Luttrell; Shu Feng; Philip P Chen; Ted Spaide
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2.  Error in measurement of intraocular pressure with the Icare and IcarePRO.

Authors:  Mitsuya Otsuka; Naoki Tojo; Atsushi Hayashi
Journal:  Int Ophthalmol       Date:  2019-11-06       Impact factor: 2.031

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4.  Evaluation of the Effect of Body Position on Intraocular Pressure Measured with Rebound Tonometer

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5.  Intraocular Pressure Measurements in Standing Position with a Rebound Tonometer.

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Authors:  Chong Liu; Yu Li; Mengmeng Wang; Jing Li; Ningli Wang; Fengju Zhang
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7.  Comparison of Two Tonometers in the Evaluation of 24-Hour Intraocular Pressure and Mean Ocular Perfusion Pressure in Patients with Thyroid-Associated Ophthalmopathy.

Authors:  Weijie Liu; Yao Zhou; Xiaozhou Hu; Haochen Jin; Jie Ye; Mingna Xu; Zihui Liu; Wencan Wu; Yunhai Tu
Journal:  J Ophthalmol       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 1.974

8.  HIOP-Reader: Automated Data Extraction for the Analysis of Manually Recorded Nycthemeral IOPs and Glaucoma Progression.

Authors:  Vaia Agorastou; Julian Schön; Raoul Verma-Fuehring; Mohamad Dakroub; Jost Hillenkamp; Frank Puppe; Nils A Loewen
Journal:  Transl Vis Sci Technol       Date:  2022-06-01       Impact factor: 3.048

  8 in total

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