| Literature DB >> 33962561 |
Kentaro Nishida1, Shizuka Takahashi2, Hirokazu Sakaguchi2, Shigeru Sato2, Masanori Kanai2, Akihiko Shiraki2, Taku Wakabayashi2, Chikako Hara2, Yoko Fukushima2, Susumu Sakimoto2, Kaori Sayanagi2, Ryo Kawasaki2, Kohji Nishida2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During panretinal photocoagulation (PRP), the outer retina, especially the photoreceptors, are destroyed. During such procedures, the impact of the retinal photocoagulation, which is performed in the same photocoagulated area, may change if it is applied to different locations with different photoreceptor densities. Thus, we aimed to evaluate the influence of photoreceptor density on PRP.Entities:
Keywords: Computer based methods; Panretinal laser photocoagulation; Photocoagulation index; Photoreceptor density; Photoreceptor destruction index
Year: 2021 PMID: 33962561 PMCID: PMC8103585 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-021-01945-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Fig. 1Geometric formula to calculate the curved surface area of a spherical dome and anatomical dimensions of a standard eyeball. a. If the radius of the dome is r, the height of the dome is h, the radius of the bottom is c, and the base area is B, the curved surface area (S), excluding B of the dome is S = 2πrh = π (c2 + h2). b. The area of the whole retina and the retina up to the equator. These dimensions were derived from a textbook [23]. c. The areas in S are equal to the areas of circles with radii of 18.6 mm and 15.6 mm, calculated via the formula presented in (a)
Fig. 2The PRP-free area. The anatomical dimensions of a standard eyeball taken from a textbook [23]. The PRP-free area was set as a circle with a radius of 5 mm (broken line). The PRP-free area is equal to the area of a circle with a 5.14-mm radius calculated using the formula presented above in Fig. 1a
Fig. 3The average photoreceptor density graph and the 3D average distribution of photoreceptors. a The average photoreceptor density graph was created using photoreceptor density data from a previous study [22]. b This graph was rotated around the y-axis. c A circular cylinder corresponding to the optic disc was hollowed out, and the 3D average distribution of photoreceptors was constructed
Fig. 4Simulations of scatter PRP and full-scatter PRP using a geometry-based simulation and based on photoreceptor densities. a Simulations of scatter PRP and full-scatter PRP (size 400 μm on the retina, 1 spot width apart) using a geometry-based simulation. b Simulation of scatter PRP and full-scatter PRP based on photoreceptor densities. The numbers of photoreceptors destroyed and the photoreceptor destruction indexes are shown in Table 1
The number of photoreceptors destroyed, photoreceptor destruction indexes, and photocoagulation indexes
| Before PRP | Scatter PRP | Full-scatter PRP | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of residual photoreceptors | 96,571,900 | 80,963,700 | 77,451,300 |
| Total number of destroyed photoreceptors | 0 | 15,608,200 | 19,120,600 |
| 0 | 16.2 | 19.8 | |
| 0 | 14.3 | 21.3 |