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Featured researches published by Doina Gherghel.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2000

Relationship between ocular perfusion pressure and retrobulbar blood flow in patients with glaucoma with progressive damage

Doina Gherghel; Selim Orgül; Konstantin Gugleta; Margarita Gekkieva; Josef Flammer

PURPOSE To evaluate the relationship between ocular perfusion pressure and color Doppler measurements in patients with glaucoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS Twenty patients with primary open-angle glaucoma with visual field deterioration in spite of an intraocular pressure lowered below 21 mm Hg, 20 age-matched patients with glaucoma with stable visual fields, and 20 age-matched healthy controls were recruited. After a 20-minute rest in a supine position, intraocular pressure and color Doppler measurements parameters of the ophthalmic artery and the central retinal artery were obtained. Correlations between mean ocular perfusion pressure and color Doppler measurements parameters were determined. RESULTS Patients with glaucoma showed a higher intraocular pressure (P <.0008) and a lower mean ocular perfusion pressure (P <.0045) compared with healthy subjects. Patients with deteriorating glaucoma showed a lower mean blood pressure (P =.033) and a lower end diastolic velocity in the central retinal artery (P =.0093) compared with normals. Mean ocular perfusion pressure correlated positively with end diastolic velocity in the ophthalmic artery (R = 0.66, P =.002) and central retinal artery (R = 0.74, P <.0001) and negatively with resistivity index in the ophthalmic artery (R = -0.70, P =.001) and central retinal artery (R = -0.62, P =.003) in patients with deteriorating glaucoma. Such correlations did not occur in patients with glaucoma with stable visual fields or in normal subjects. The correlations were statistically significantly different between the study groups (parallelism of regression lines in an analysis of covariance model) for end diastolic velocity (P =.001) and resistivity index (P =.0001) in the ophthalmic artery, as well as for end diastolic velocity (P =.0009) and resistivity index (P =. 001) in the central retinal artery. CONCLUSIONS The present findings suggest that alterations in ocular blood flow regulation may contribute to the progression in glaucomatous damage.


Acta Ophthalmologica | 2010

Use of the retinal vessel analyzer in ocular blood flow research

Gerhard Garhöfer; Toke Bek; A. G. Boehm; Doina Gherghel; Juan E. Grunwald; Peter Friis Jeppesen; Hélène Kergoat; Konstantin Kotliar; I. Lanzl; John V. Lovasik; Edgar Nagel; Walthard Vilser; Selim Orgül; Leopold Schmetterer

Acta Ophthalmol. 2010: 88: 717–722


Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 2004

Corneal pachymetry in normal and keratoconic eyes: Orbscan II versus ultrasound

Doina Gherghel; Sarah L. Hosking; Sanjay Mantry; S Banerjee; Shehzad A. Naroo; Sunil Shah

Purpose: To compare corneal thickness measurements using Orbscan II (OII) and ultrasonic (US) pachymetry in normal and in keratoconic eyes. Setting: Eye Department, Heartlands and Solihull NHS Trust, Birmingham, United Kingdom. Methods: Central corneal thickness (CCT) was measured by means of OII and US pachymetry in 1 eye of 72 normal subjects and 36 keratoconus patients. The apical corneal thickness (ACT) in keratoconus patients was also evaluated using each method. The mean of the difference, standard deviation (SD), and 95% limits of agreement (LoA = mean ± 2 SD), with and without applying the default linear correction factor (LCF), were determined for each sample. The Student t test was used to identify significant differences between methods, and the correlation between methods was determined using the Pearson bivariate correlation. Bland‐Altman analysis was performed to confirm that the results of the 2 instruments were clinically comparable. Results: In normal eyes, the mean difference (± 95% LoA) in CCT was 1.04 &mgr;m ± 68.52 (SD) (P>.05; r = 0.71) when the LCF was used and 46.73 ± 75.40 &mgr;m (P = .0001; r = 0.71) without the LCF. In keratoconus patients, the mean difference (± 95% LoA) in CCT between methods was 42.46 ± 66.56 &mgr;m (P<.0001: r = 0.85) with the LCF, and 2.51 ± 73.00 &mgr;m (P>.05: r = 0.85) without the LCF. The mean difference (± 95% LoA) in ACT for this group was 49.24 ± 60.88 &mgr;m (P<.0001: r = 0.89) with the LCF and 12.71 ± 68.14 &mgr;m (P = .0077; r = 0.89) when the LCF was not used. Conclusions: This study suggests that OII and US pachymetry provide similar readings for CCT in normal subjects when an LCF is used. In keratoconus patients, OII provides a valid clinical tool for the noninvasive assessment of CCT when the LCF is not applied.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2001

Retrobulbar Blood Flow in Glaucoma Patients With Nocturnal Over-Dipping in Systemic Blood Pressure

Doina Gherghel; Selim Orgül; Konstantin Gugleta; Josef Flammer

PURPOSE To evaluate the relationship between the circadian blood pressure rhythm and the retrobulbar blood flow in glaucoma patients. DESIGN Cross-sectional study. METHODS Circadian blood pressure measurements and color Doppler imaging (CDI) in the ophthalmic artery as well as the central retinal artery of one randomly selected eye were obtained in 193 primary open-angle glaucoma patients. CDI parameters were compared by means of analysis of covariance between patients with a nocturnal decrease in mean systemic blood pressure (MBP) below 20% of the average daytime MBP (over-dippers), patients with a decrease between 10% to 20% (dippers), and patients with a decrease of less than 10% (nondippers), using age, intraocular pressure (IOP), and MBP during color Doppler measurement as covariates. RESULTS An analysis of covariance disclosed, after correcting for age, IOP, and MBP during color Doppler imaging, a significantly lower EDV (P =.0096) and a significantly higher RI (P =.033) in the central artery of over-dipping glaucoma patients compared with nondippers or dippers. This effect seemed independent of the use of vasoactive drugs . CONCLUSIONS Glaucoma patients with a marked drop in nocturnal systemic blood pressure seem to have altered retrobulbar blood flow parameters, suggesting that an abnormal systemic blood pressure profile may be the manifestation of some kind of systemic vascular dysregulation relevant for the ocular circulation.


Journal of Refractive Surgery | 2003

Nidek OPD-scan analysis of normal, keratoconic, and penetrating keratoplasty eyes

Sunil Shah; Shehzad A. Naroo; Sarah L. Hosking; Doina Gherghel; Sanjay Mantry; Somnath Bannerjee; Katie Pedwell; Harkaran S. Bains

PURPOSE To determine by wavefront analysis the difference between eyes considered normal, eyes diagnosed with keratoconus, and eyes that have undergone penetrating keratoplasty METHODS The Nidek OPD-Scan wavefront aberrometer was used to measure ocular aberrations out to the sixth Zernike order. One hundred and thirty eyes that were free of ocular pathology, 41 eyes diagnosed with keratoconus, and 8 eyes that had undergone penetrating keratoplasty were compared for differences in root mean square value. Three and five millimeter root mean square values of the refractive power aberrometry maps of the three classes of eyes were compared. Radially symmetric and irregular higher order aberration values were compared for differences in magnitude. RESULTS Root mean square values were lower in eyes free of ocular pathology compared to eyes with keratoconus and eyes that had undergone penetrating keratoplasty. The aberrations were larger with the 5-mm pupil. Coma and spherical aberration values were lower in normal eyes. CONCLUSION Wavefront aberrometry of normal, pathological, and eyes after surgery may help to explain the visual distortions encountered by patients. The ability to measure highly aberrated eyes allows an objective assessment of the optical consequences of ocular pathology and surgery. The Nidek OPD-Scan can be used in areas other than refractive surgery.


JAMA Ophthalmology | 2013

Primary open-angle glaucoma vs normal-tension glaucoma: the vascular perspective.

Stephanie Mroczkowska; Alexandra Benavente-Perez; Anil Negi; Velota Sung; Sunni R. Patel; Doina Gherghel

OBJECTIVE To compare and contrast the presence of ocular and systemic vascular function in patients with newly diagnosed and previously untreated primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) vs those with normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) and comparable early-stage, functional loss. METHODS The systemic vascular function of 19 patients with POAG, 19 patients with NTG, and 20 healthy individuals serving as controls was assessed using 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, peripheral pulse-wave analysis, and carotid intima-media thickness. Retinal vascular reactivity to flicker light was assessed using dynamic retinal vessel analysis (Imedos, GmbH). RESULTS Compared with controls, patients with POAG and those with NTG exhibited similarly increased nocturnal systemic blood pressure variability (P = .01), peripheral arterial stiffness (P = .02), carotid intima-media thickness (P = .04), and reduced ocular perfusion pressure (P < .001). Furthermore, on dynamic retinal vessel analysis, both glaucoma groups exhibited steeper retinal arterial constriction slopes after cessation of flicker (P = .007) and a similarly increased fluctuation in arterial and venous baseline diameter (P = .008 and P = .009, respectively) compared with controls. CONCLUSIONS Patients with POAG or NTG exhibit similar alterations in ocular and systemic circulation in the early stages of their disease process. This finding highlights the importance of considering vascular risk factors in both conditions and raises questions about the current separation of the two conditions into distinct clinical entities.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2013

Reduction in blood glutathione levels occurs similarly in patients with primary-open angle or normal tension glaucoma

Doina Gherghel; Stephanie Mroczkowska; Lu Qin

PURPOSE To investigate in parallel the systemic glutathione levels of patients suffering from primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) or normal tension glaucoma (NTG) with comparable functional loss. METHODS Thirty-four POAG patients, 30 NTG patients, and 53 controls were subjected to blood analysis to detect the level of circulating glutathione in its reduced (GSH) and oxidized (GSSG) forms. Systemic blood pressure (BP) and ocular perfusion pressure (OPP) parameters were also determined. RESULTS Independent of age, POAG and NTG patients demonstrated significantly lower GSH and t-GSH levels than age-matched controls (P < 0.001). Additionally, a lower redox index was found, but in POAG patients only, in comparison to both NTG and control groups (P = 0.020). GSSG levels were, however, similar between all study groups (P > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates, for the first time, that both POAG and NTG patients exhibit lower GSH and t-GSH levels than age-matched controls, indicating a similar general compromise of the antioxidant defense systems may exist in both conditions.


Acta Ophthalmologica | 2012

Coexistence of macro- and micro-vascular abnormalities in newly diagnosed normal tension glaucoma patients

Stephanie Mroczkowska; Anikó Ekárt; Velota Sung; Anil Negi; Lu Qin; Sunni R. Patel; Sarita Jacob; Carole Atkins; Alexandra Benavente-Perez; Doina Gherghel

Purpose:  To investigate the coexistence of ocular microvascular and systemic macrovascular abnormalities in early stage, newly diagnosed and previously untreated normal tension glaucoma patients (NTG).


Japanese Journal of Ophthalmology | 2001

The Influence of Sex Difference in Measurements with the Langham Ocular Blood Flow System

Margarita Gekkieva; Selim Orgül; Doina Gherghel; Konstantin Gugleta; Christian Prünte; Josef Flammer

PURPOSE To assess sex difference and parameters possibly accounting for such a difference in healthy subjects evaluated by means of the Langham Ocular Blood Flow (OBF) System. METHODS Pulse amplitude of intraocular pressure (IOP) and pulsatile ocular blood flow (POBF) as measured with the Langham OBF System were assessed in 86 healthy men and 69 healthy women. RESULTS Compared to men, women showed higher POBF (mean +/- SD: 722.6 +/- 152.8 versus 647.8 +/- 164.9 microL/min; P =.0056) and pulse amplitude (mean +/- SD: 2.3 +/- 0.7 versus 2.0 +/- 0.6 mm Hg; P =.0043) values. Sex difference was still significant after correcting for age, refraction, blood pressure, IOP, and pulse rate. Pulse amplitude correlated negatively with pulse rate, and POBF correlated negatively with IOP. Women had higher readings in pulse amplitude and POBF, even after correcting for age, refraction, IOP, blood pressure, and pulse rate. CONCLUSIONS While using the Langham OBF System, one needs to be aware of sex difference that is independent of other hemodynamic parameters. How the observed difference in POBF is related to ocular blood flow, and how it might influence the preponderance of various ocular diseases in men or women remains to be clarified.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011

Altered Blood Vessel Responses in the Eye and Finger in Coronary Artery Disease

Rebekka Heitmar; Robert P. Cubbidge; Gregory Y.H. Lip; Doina Gherghel; Andrew D. Blann

PURPOSE Cardiac function, such as heart rate variability, is abnormal in coronary artery disease, but its relation with the function of ocular and nail-fold blood vessels is unknown. The hypothesis was that there is abnormal retinal and peripheral microvascular endothelial function compared with large blood vessel and cardiac function. Twenty-four patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and 30 healthy, age- and sex-matched control subjects were enrolled in the study. METHODS Peripheral microcirculatory function was measured with continuous retinal vessel diameter assessment and nail-fold capillaroscopy. Systemic vascular function was evaluated by 24-hour blood pressure, arterial stiffness, low (LF)- and high (HF)-frequency heart rate variability, ECG monitoring, and the plasma markers von Willebrand factor (vWf) and soluble E selectin. RESULTS Peripheral nail-fold capillary (P = 0.009) and retinal vessel (average baseline corrected flicker response [BFR]; P = 0.034) responses and reaction time in response to flicker (P = 0.016) were significantly different in patients compared with controls. Furthermore, patients demonstrated higher arterial stiffness (P = 0.005), LF and HF heart rate variability (P = 0.004, P = 0.006), and vWf level (P = 0.044), but there was no difference in soluble E selectin level (P = 0.278). In the CAD patients, LF and HF heart rate variability both correlated with average BFR (r = 0.58, P = 0.004; r = -0.6, P = 0.003, respectively). There was no such relationship in the healthy controls. CONCLUSIONS Microcirculatory abnormalities of the retina and nail-fold vessels are present in CAD. The two indices of heart rate variability correlated with an index of ocular vessel responses. The latter may be a surrogate marker of abnormal heart rate variability in CAD.

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Sunni R. Patel

University Health Network

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Alexandra Benavente-Perez

State University of New York College of Optometry

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