Debra A. Street
Georgetown University
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Ophthalmology | 1992
Jonathan C. Javitt; James M. Tielsch; Joseph K. Canner; Margaret M. Kolb; Alfred Sommer; Earl P. Steinberg; Marilyn Bergner; Gerard F. Anderson; Eric B Bass; Alan M. Gittelsohn; Marcia W. Legro; Neil R. Powe; Oliver P. Schein; Phoebe Sharkey; Donald M. Steinwachs; Debra A. Street; Donald J. Doughman; Merton Flom; Thomas S. Harbin; Harry L.S. Knopf; Thomas Lewis; Stephen A. Obstbaum; Denis M. O'Day; Walter J. Stark; Arlo C. Terry; C. Pat Wilkinson
PURPOSE The authors studied 57,103 randomly selected Medicare beneficiaries who underwent extracapsular cataract extraction in 1986 or 1987 to determine the possible association between performance of neodymium (Nd):YAG laser capsulotomy and the risk of subsequent retinal break or detachment. METHODS Cases of cataract surgery were identified from Medicare claims submitted in 1986 and 1987 and were followed through the end of 1988. Episodes of cataract surgery, posterior capsulotomy, and retinal complications were ascertained based on procedure and diagnosis codes listed in physician bills and hospital discharge records. Lifetable and Coxs proportional hazards models were used to analyze the risk of retinal detachment or break in patients undergoing and not undergoing capsulotomy during the period of observation. RESULTS Of the 57,103 persons identified as having undergone extracapsular cataract extraction in 1986 or 1987, 13,709 subsequently underwent Nd:YAG laser capsulotomy between 1986 and 1988. A total of 337 persons had aphakic or pseudophakic retinal detachments between 1986 and 1988 and an additional 194 underwent repair of a retinal break. Proportional hazards modeling shows a 3.9-fold increase in the risk of retinal break or detachment among those who underwent capsulotomy (95% confidence interval: 2.89 to 5.25). Younger patient age, male sex, and white race also were associated with increased risk of retinal complications after extracapsular cataract extraction. CONCLUSION The authors conclude that there is a statistically significant increase in the risk of retinal detachment or break in those patients who undergo capsulotomy after cataract extraction. Therefore, capsulotomy should be deferred until the patients impairment caused by capsular opacification warrants the increased risk of retinal complications associated with performance of capsulotomy.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1996
Ketan H. Patel; Jonathan C. Javitt; Debra A. Street; James M. Tielsch; Joanne Katz; Harry A. Quigley; Alfred Sommer
PURPOSE To study the incidence of acute angle-closure glaucoma secondary to pupillary dilation and to identify screening methods for detecting angles at risk of occlusion. METHODS We studied 5,308 respondents to the Baltimore Eye Survey, a cross-sectional, population-based survey conducted in a multiracial urban community. We measured incidence of acute angle-closure glaucoma after pharmacologic mydriasis and the specificity and sensitivity associated with three screening criteria in identifying those with potentially occludable angles. The screening factors were presence of shallow anterior chamber on penlight examination, history of glaucoma, and blindness. RESULTS Of the 4,870 subjects whose eyes were dilated on screening examination, none developed acute angle-closure glaucoma. However, 38 patients of the 1,770 who were referred for definitive eye examination were judged to have occludable angles on the basis of gonioscopic methods. Of note, subjects aged 70 years and more were three times more likely to have occludable angles than those aged 40 to 69 years (P < .004) In 14 black subjects with occludable angles, six were detected by history of glaucoma and not by shallow anterior chamber configuration; alternatively, in 24 white subjects, 11 (46%) were detected on the basis of shallow anterior chambers (Fishers exact test, P = .014). When the three screening factors were considered alone and in combination, the most effective combination for predicting a potentially occludable angle was to use shallow anterior chamber on penlight examination and history of glaucoma. These criteria provide 60.5% sensitivity and 93.3% specificity. CONCLUSION If screening is performed accurately and the results are negative, the risk of dilating a potentially occludable angle was less than one in 333 subjects (negative predictive value, 0.997) in this population.
Ophthalmology | 1991
Jonathan C. Javitt; James M. Tielsch; Joseph K. Canner; Margaret M. Kolb; Alfred Sommer; Earl P. Steinberg; Marilyn Bergner; Gerard F. Anderson; Eric B Bass; Alan M. Gittelsohn; Marcia W. Legro; Neil R. Powe; Oliver P. Schein; Phoebe Sharkey; Donald M. Steinwachs; Debra A. Street; Donald J. Doughman; Merton Flom; Thomas S. Harbin; Harry L.S. Knopf; Thomas Lewis; Stephen A. Obstbaum; Denis M. O'Day; Walter J. Stark; Arlo C. Terry; C. Pat Wilkinson
Archives of Ophthalmology | 1993
Jonathan C. Javitt; M. Harvey Brenner; Barbara Curbow; Marcia W. Legro; Debra A. Street
Archives of Ophthalmology | 1991
Jonathan C. Javitt; Susan Vitale; Joseph K. Canner; Debra A. Street; Henry Krakauer; A. Marshall McBean; Alfred Sommer
Archives of Ophthalmology | 1987
George O. Waring; R. Doyle Stulting; Debra A. Street
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1995
Ketan H. Patel; Jonathan C. Javitt; James M. Tielsch; Debra A. Street; Joanne Katz; Harry A. Quigley; Alfred Sommer
Archives of Ophthalmology | 1987
Bernard E. McCarey; George O. Waring; Debra A. Street
Journal of Glaucoma | 1992
Srinivas M. Sastry; Debra A. Street; Jonathan C. Javitt
Archives of Ophthalmology | 1996
Debra A. Street; Jonathan C. Javitt; Qin Wang; James M. Tielsch; Joseph K. Canner; Eric B Bass; Earl P. Steinberg