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      Effect of Age on Pentacam Keratoconus Indices

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          To assess the effect of age on elevation and pachymetric Pentacam keratoconus (KC) detection indices, and the need to adjust normative values accordingly.

          Methods

          In a retrospective study, 95 eyes of myopic normal subjects without KC were evaluated using the OCULUS Pentacam, with an age range of 17.4 to 46.8 years. Subjects were categorised into three groups according to their age: the first included those younger than 21 years (19 eyes), the second was for the age range of 21–40 years (65 eyes), and the third comprised subjects older than 40 years (11 eyes).

          Results

          There were statistically significant differences among the three groups regarding many elevation indices: AE from BFS, PE from BFS, and PE minus AE from BFS ( P = 0.003, 0.010, and <0.001, resp.), and pachymetric indices: PPI avg, PPI max, ART avg, ART max, and diagonal decentration of the thinnest point ( P = <0.001, 0.024, 0.003, 0.026, and 0.026, resp.). On comparing subjects below 21 years to those above 40 years, there was a statistically significant decrease of both PE from BFS and PE minus AE ( P = 0.005 and <0.001, resp.) and statistically significant increase in AE from BFS ( P = 0.001).

          Conclusions

          Age is an important determinant of elevation indices, significantly altering their normative values. The use of the more robust pachymetry, rather than elevation, indices is recommended in subjects below 21 or above 40 years of age.

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          Most cited references10

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          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Use of a support vector machine for keratoconus and subclinical keratoconus detection by topographic and tomographic data.

          To define a new classification method for the diagnosis of keratoconus based on corneal measurements provided by a Scheimpflug camera combined with Placido corneal topography (Sirius, CSO, Florence, Italy).
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            Pentacam Scheimpflug tomography findings in topographically normal patients and subclinical keratoconus cases.

            To evaluate Pentacam ectasia detection indices in topographically normal patients and in subclinical keratoconus cases.
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              • Article: not found

              Effects of aging on anterior and posterior corneal astigmatism.

              To evaluate age-related changes in astigmatism of both corneal surfaces and the whole cornea. The right eyes of 370 subjects were measured with a rotating Scheimpflug camera (Pentacam). Astigmatisms of the anterior and posterior corneal surfaces were determined. The total corneal astigmatism was derived using power vector summation and vergence tracing. Age-related changes to corneal astigmatism were evaluated using polar value analysis (both in diopter and millimeter). For the anterior and total cornea, the proportion of with-the-rule astigmatisms decreased and those of oblique and against-the-rule astigmatisms increased with age. For the posterior cornea, most eyes displayed against-the-rule astigmatisms in all age groups. There was a significant trend toward against-the-rule astigmatism associated with increasing age for both anterior and total corneal astigmatisms (mean changes of -0.18 and -0.16 diopters/5 years, respectively), and toward with the rule in posterior corneal astigmatism (a mean change of 0.022 diopters/5 years). Regarding shape changes, a "flat meridian toward a more vertical orientation" trend with increasing age for both the anterior and posterior corneal surfaces was observed (mean changes of 0.0295 and 0.0224 mm/5 years, respectively). The posterior corneal surface compensated for the astigmatism arising from the anterior corneal surface in 91.4% and 47.7% of eyes in the 21-30 and > or =71 years groups, respectively. There were age-related shifts toward against-the-rule and with-the-rule astigmatisms for the anterior and posterior corneal surfaces, respectively. The compensating effects of the posterior corneal surface on anterior corneal astigmatism decreased with advancing age.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Ophthalmol
                J Ophthalmol
                JOPH
                Journal of Ophthalmology
                Hindawi
                2090-004X
                2090-0058
                2018
                22 April 2018
                : 2018
                : 2016564
                Affiliations
                1Ophthalmology Department, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt
                2Al Watany Eye Hospital, Cairo, Egypt
                3Ophthalmology Department, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt
                Author notes

                Academic Editor: Flavio Mantelli

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8818-8623
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1237-7249
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7808-6658
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3881-3598
                Article
                10.1155/2018/2016564
                5937440
                3920e798-9590-4933-8272-ccef5d8f8f8d
                Copyright © 2018 Maged Maher Salib Roshdy et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 2 November 2017
                : 23 February 2018
                : 21 March 2018
                Categories
                Research Article

                Ophthalmology & Optometry
                Ophthalmology & Optometry

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