New Dynamometric Techniques For Predicting Glaucoma Progression
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$171,825.00
Summary
Glaucoma is a major cause of blindness in our community. The biggest risk factor for glaucoma is raised intraocular pressure. However, the exact cause of the disease remains unknown. Through our basic science studies in animals we have discovered that changes in blood flow in the vessels at the optic disk may be involved in the disease process. In recent clinical trials we discovered that the presence or absence of pulsations in the retinal veins at the disk was both an indicator of severity and ....Glaucoma is a major cause of blindness in our community. The biggest risk factor for glaucoma is raised intraocular pressure. However, the exact cause of the disease remains unknown. Through our basic science studies in animals we have discovered that changes in blood flow in the vessels at the optic disk may be involved in the disease process. In recent clinical trials we discovered that the presence or absence of pulsations in the retinal veins at the disk was both an indicator of severity and progression of glaucoma. This is a major breakthrough because there is no other means of predicting in which glaucoma patients vision loss will develop most rapidly. This information will be very helpful in deciding which patients should have the most agressive treatment to restore normal intraocular pressure. This project seeks to develop a new commercial device to make such an examination easy for any clinical ophthalmologist. The device allows the doctor to examine the vessels at the disk whilst applying slight pressure to the eye to temporarily raise intraocular pressure. A footswitch is pressed when the doctor sees the vessels pulsate. The required force is recorded by a laptop computer and the data stored along with the patients details. Now we have confirmed the ability of such a measurement to predict the rate of visual field loss in glaucoma, such a measurement will become much more widespread in clinical ophthalmology, offering a new and large scale opportunity for such instrumentation. Our device will be easy to operate, more comfortable for the patient, and will be of major diagnostic value in glaucoma clinics worldwide.Read moreRead less
Advanced New Therapeutics And Diagnostics In Retinal Diseases And Glaucoma
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$3,550,944.00
Summary
This program proposal targets the most common blinding diseases in clinical ophthalmology. The applicant team includes research and clinical ophthalmologists and basic scientists. The team have an internationally established reputation in bringing basic science discoveries to the point where they can impact directly on clinical diagnosis and therapy. The proposed research includes new treatment therapies for diabetic retinopathy, age related macular degeneration, and retinal vascular diseases. A ....This program proposal targets the most common blinding diseases in clinical ophthalmology. The applicant team includes research and clinical ophthalmologists and basic scientists. The team have an internationally established reputation in bringing basic science discoveries to the point where they can impact directly on clinical diagnosis and therapy. The proposed research includes new treatment therapies for diabetic retinopathy, age related macular degeneration, and retinal vascular diseases. A new diagnostic technique for glaucoma and new instrumentation for detecting areas of poor blood flow and oxygen supply in the eye are also to be developed. Past successes in our current program grant make us confident that we can produce clinically useful outcomes from this new proposal.Read moreRead less
INTRARETINAL OXYGEN CONSUMPTION AND THE PREVENTION OF HYPOXIA IN RETINAL ISCHEMIA
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$164,444.00
Summary
Adequate oxygen supply to the retina is critical for normal visual function. The oxygen is normally supplied by the blood flowing in the two circulations that support the retina. These are the choroidal circulation, lying behind the retina, and the retinal circulation, which supports the front half of the retina. The retinal circulation is particularly vulnerable to vascular disease and insufficient blood flow (ischemia). Vascular changes are involved in a wide range of retinal diseases which ar ....Adequate oxygen supply to the retina is critical for normal visual function. The oxygen is normally supplied by the blood flowing in the two circulations that support the retina. These are the choroidal circulation, lying behind the retina, and the retinal circulation, which supports the front half of the retina. The retinal circulation is particularly vulnerable to vascular disease and insufficient blood flow (ischemia). Vascular changes are involved in a wide range of retinal diseases which are currently responsible for the majority of new blindness in our community. The choroidal circulation is relatively robust, and offers a potential avenue for increasing oxygen delivery to the retina in the clinical management of ischemic retinal diseases. The feasibility of such an approach is strongly dependent on the oxygen requirements of the retina, and how this is influenced by retinal ischemia. We plan to find out how much oxygen is consumed by the many different layers within the retina under normal conditions and then determine how this changes under ischemic conditions. We will then see if we can supply enough oxygen from the choroid by a combination of raising the oxygen content of the blood, increasing choroidal blood flow, and reducing the amount of oxygen used by the outer half of the retina. Our experiments will be done in laboratory rats, but the same principles are readily transferable to humans if they prove to be beneficial in protecting the retina from ischemic damage. Our study will also quantify the relationship between oxygen levels in the blood stream, and those in the different layers of the retina. This information may prove valuable in the treatment and the prevention of other retinal diseases where the manipulation of the intraretinal oxygen environment is an exciting new avenue of research.Read moreRead less
OCULAR PERFUSION PRESSURE: A MODIFIABLE RISK FACTOR FOR GLAUCOMA?
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$327,560.00
Summary
This project aims to study the mechanisms underlying glaucoma, the second leading cause of vision loss. Specifically it will provide proof for the idea that a person can develop vision loss without having high eye pressure, if their blood pressure cannot provide enough supply to the eye. It will achieve this by combining expertise from several disciplines; physiology, blood pressure control, anatomy and biochemistry. This project will help to improve glaucoma detection, monitoring and treatment.