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Dive into the research topics where H. Culver Boldt is active.

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Featured researches published by H. Culver Boldt.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1996

Visual Field Defects After Macular Hole Surgery

H. Culver Boldt; Paul M. Munden; James C. Folk; Mary G. Mehaffey

Purpose To describe a group of patients with dense visual field defects following macular hole surgery. Methods Nine (7%) of 125 patients reviewed noted onset of dense visual field defects following uncomplicated vitrectomy with gas-fluid exchange for the treatment of macular hole. Patient records were reviewed to investigate the etiology of these defects. Results Eight (89%) of nine eyes that had surgery for macular hole developed dense, wedgeshaped visual field defects in the temporal periphery. One eye had an inferonasal wedge-shaped defect extending to fixation. Seven (78%) of nine eyes had generalized or focal narrowing of the retinal arteriole extending into the area of retina corresponding to the visual field defect, and five (56%) of nine eyes developed mild to moderate segmental nasal optic disk pallor. Postoperative fluorescein angiography disclosed one eye with delayed filling of the retinal arteriole extending into the area of retina corresponding to the visual field defect. Vitrectomy specimens showed no evidence of nerve fiber layer or internal limiting membrane in eight (89%) of nine eyes. Conclusions Visual field defects can occur following vitrectomy and gas-fluid exchange for macular hole. The most common visual field defect is dense and wedge-shaped and involves the temporal visual field. Although unclear, the etiology may involve trauma to the peripapillary retinal vasculature or nerve fiber layer during elevation of the posterior hyaloid or during aspiration at the time of air-fluid exchange, followed by compression and occlusion of the retinal peripapillary vessels during gas tamponade.


Ophthalmology | 2001

Traumatic macular hole: observations, pathogenesis, and results of vitrectomy surgery.

Robert N. Johnson; H. Richard McDonald; Hilel Lewis; M. Gilbert Grand; Timothy G. Murray; William F. Mieler; Mark W. Johnson; H. Culver Boldt; Karl R. Olsen; Paul E. Tornambe; James C. Folk

PURPOSE To review our experience with vitrectomy surgery techniques for the treatment of traumatic macular holes and the biomicroscopic and surgical findings. DESIGN Retrospective noncomparative, multicenter, case series. PARTICIPANTS AND INTERVENTION Twenty-five patients with traumatic macular hole underwent surgical repair. INTERVENTION Vitrectomy with membrane peeling and gas injection followed by prone positioning for 7 to 14 days. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Postoperative evaluation included visual acuity testing, closure of the macular hole, and ocular complications. RESULTS The macular hole was successfully closed in 24 of 25 cases (96%). The visual acuity improved two or more lines in 21 (84%) cases, and 16 (64%) achieved 20/50 or better vision. CONCLUSIONS Vitrectomy surgery can successfully close macular holes associated with trauma and improve vision.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 1997

Correlation of ultrasound parameter imaging with microcirculatory patterns in uveal melanomas

Ronald H. Silverman; Robert Folberg; H. Culver Boldt; Harriet O. Lloyd; Mark J. Rondeau; Mary G. Mehaffey; Frederic L. Lizzi; D. Jackson Coleman

Previous studies demonstrated a correlation between acoustic backscatter parameters and survival in ocular melanoma. The histologic presence of microvascular networks in ocular melanoma is also associated with death from metastases. This study tests the hypothesis that melanomas grouped on the basis of these microvascular patterns are separable by ultrasound spectrum analysis. We scanned 40 melanomas using a 10-MHz ultrasound unit equipped for digitization of radio frequency data. After enucleation, tumors were sectioned in planes corresponding to the ultrasonographic examination and stained to demonstrate microcirculation. Acoustic spectral parameters were compared between 14 melanomas with a nevuslike microcirculation and 26 with foci of high-risk microvascular structures. Smaller scatterer size, lower acoustic concentration and greater spatial variability were found to correlate with high-risk microvascular patterns and areas of cystic degeneration. We suggest that nonvascular extracellular matrix components associated with microvessels may be responsible for the correlation of acoustic parameters with microvascular pattern and distribution.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1997

Iatrogenic Central Retinal Vein Occlusion and Hyperviscosity Associated with High-dose Intravenous Immunoglobulin Administration

Kean T. Oh; H. Culver Boldt; Ronald P. Danis

PURPOSE To describe a patient with iatrogenically induced central retinal vein occlusions secondary to serum hyperviscosity from intravenous immunoglobulin administration. METHOD Case report. RESULTS The patient developed bilateral central retinal vein occlusions in association with high-dose intravenous immunoglobulins. The central retinal vein occlusions resolved when the immunoglobulins were withheld and serum hyperviscosity decreased. CONCLUSION Administration of high-dose intravenous immunoglobulins can be associated with hyperviscosity syndrome manifested by central retinal vein occlusion.


Retina-the Journal of Retinal and Vitreous Diseases | 1996

The Use Of Intravttreal Tissue Plasminogen Activator In The Treatment Of Experimental Subretinal Hemorrhage In The Pig Model

Diane E. Boone; H. Culver Boldt; Robin D. Ross; James C. Folk; Alan E. Kimura

Purpose To clinically and surgically evaluate clot lysis in an animal model of subretinal hemorrhage after intravitreal injection of tissue plasminogen activator. Methods Autologous subretinal hemorrhages were created via a transvitreal approach in 18 pigs. The next day (day 1) animals were randomly selected to receive either an intravitreal injection of 0.1 mL balanced salt solution or 0.1 mL tissue plasminogen activator (25 μg) followed by observation or vitrectomy a day later. On day 2, six pigs (all treated with tissue plasminogen activator) underwent a vitrectomy in which aspiration of the subretinal hemorrhage was attempted. The other eyes were evaluated for clot lysis by ophthalmos-copy at days 3, 10, and 30. All eyes were examined histopathologically. Results The eyes that had been treated with tissue plasminogen activator demonstrated a color change at the peripheral margin, which suggested that clot lysis had occurred. At the time of the vitrectomy, the clots were liquefied partially; removal by aspiration alone, however, was not possible. Photoreceptor damage was moderate to severe by day 10 in all eyes, whether they were treated with tissue plasminogen activator or balanced salt solution. All eyes that underwent vitrectomy had moderate to severe photoreceptor damage. Conclusions In this animal model, intravitreal tissue plasminogen activator was associated with features that suggested partial clot lysis; tissue plasminogen activator did -not- produce sufficient lysis to allow surgical removal by aspiration alone, however.


Ophthalmology | 2013

Combination Therapy for Neovascular Age-related Macular Degeneration Refractory to Anti-Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Agents

Kevin R. Tozer; A. Brock Roller; Lawrence P. Chong; Srinivas R. Sadda; James C. Folk; Vinit B. Mahajan; Stephen R. Russell; H. Culver Boldt; Elliott H. Sohn

OBJECTIVE To examine the outcomes of combination anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and photodynamic therapy (PDT) for the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD) refractory to anti-VEGF monotherapy. DESIGN Retrospective, interventional case series. PARTICIPANTS Twenty-six eyes of 26 patients treated with anti-VEGF monotherapy for neovascular AMD with persistent subretinal or intraretinal fluid after at least 3 anti-VEGF injections in the 7 months before combination treatment. INTERVENTION Combination anti-VEGF treatment and PDT. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Visual acuity at 1 or 2, 3, and 6 months and central retinal thickness at 1 or 2, 3, and 6 months. Secondary outcome measures were change in number of fluid-free visits and interval between treatments in the 7 months before and 6 months after combination therapy. RESULTS Statistically significant improvements in logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution visual acuities were present at 1 month (P = 0.01) and 3 months (P = 0.01). Significant decreases in central subfield retinal thickness on optic coherence tomography (OCT) were seen at 1 month (P = 4×10(-5)), 3 months (P = 3×10(-4)), and 6 months (P = 4×10(-5)) as compared with precombination treatment OCT scans. The percentage of patient visits with no subretinal fluid increased from 0.5% to 41% after the initiation of combination therapy (P = 1×10(-5)). The interval between treatments increased from once every 1.6 months in the 7 months before combination treatment to once every 2.7 months in the 6 months after combination treatment (P = 0.002). No ocular complications attributable to PDT were seen. CONCLUSIONS Rescue therapy with the combination of anti-VEGF and PDT in eyes that have failed anti-VEGF monotherapy resulted in a mean improvement in vision, a decreased central subfield retinal thickness, and an increase in fluid-free intervals. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE(S) The author(s) have no proprietary or commercial interest in any materials discussed in this article.


Ophthalmology | 2009

I-125 brachytherapy for choroidal melanoma photographic and angiographic abnormalities: the Collaborative Ocular Melanoma Study: COMS Report No. 30.

H. Culver Boldt; B. Michele Melia; Judy Liu; Sandra M. Reynolds

OBJECTIVES (1) To summarize the protocol used for grading features of postradiation abnormalities from fundus photographs and fluorescein angiograms of patients enrolled in the Collaborative Ocular Melanoma Study (COMS); (2) to document the prevalence of features of interest in the posterior pole of these eyes during 8 years of follow-up; and (3) to investigate baseline patient, tumor, and treatment characteristics associated with posterior pole features. DESIGN Observational case series within a randomized, multicenter clinical trial. PARTICIPANTS We evaluated 650 patients who were assigned to and received iodine-125 brachytherapy in the COMS for medium-sized tumors. METHODS Color fundus photographs and fluorescein angiograms were taken at baseline and 2, 5, and 8 years; 30 features were graded according to a standard protocol. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Prevalence at selected time intervals of fundus photographic features associated with retinopathy and optic neuropathy. RESULTS The percentage of patients with >/=1 feature of interest was 49.2% at baseline, 84.4% at 2 years, 91.2% at 5 years, and 90.7% at 8 years. The most frequent findings across all follow-up examinations were macular microaneurysms (75.6% of examinations), macular angiographic leakage (75.1%), and optic disc hyperfluorescence (62.8%). The median number of features present increased significantly with each follow-up to a maximum of 7 features at 8 years. The prevalence of neovascularization of the disc at 5 years was 5.2%. The prevalence of optic neuropathy at 5 years was 27.4%. Prognostic factors for more prevalent and severe posterior pole abnormalities were diabetes, tumor location close to both optic nerve and foveal avascular zone, and greater dose of radiation to the foveola and optic nerve head. CONCLUSIONS The amount and severity of retinopathy and optic neuropathy after iodine-125 brachytherapy increased through 8 years of follow-up. Assessment of photographs and angiograms taken in accord with a standard protocol provided reliable estimates of rates of development of features of retinopathy and optic neuropathy in eyes treated using the COMS brachytherapy protocol. Our findings support earlier reports that tumor factors in addition to radiation treatment may contribute to posterior pole abnormalities. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE(S) The authors have no proprietary or commercial interest in any materials discussed in this article.


Ophthalmology | 2003

Laser treatment in fellow eyes with large drusen: Updated findings from a pilot randomized clinical trial

Maureen G. Maguire; Paul Sternberg; Thomas M. Aaberg; Daniel F. Martin; David A. Saperstein; Maureen Hyatt; James Gilman; Ray Swords; Gabriela Nemes; Lawrence J. Singerman; Thomas A. Rice; Hernando Zegarra; Michael A. Novak; Scott D. Pendergast; Z. Nicholas Zakov; John H. Niffenegger; Michelle Bartel; Susan Lichterman; Donna Knight; Kim Tilocco-DuBois; Mary Ilk; Geraldine Daley; Gregg Greanoff; John DuBois; Diane Weiss; Alice T. Lyon; Lee M. Jampol; David V. Weinberg; Beth Chiapetta; Zuzanna Strugala

PURPOSE To update the findings from the Choroidal Neovascularization Prevention Trial (CNVPT) with respect to resolution of drusen, incidence of choroidal neovascularization, and visual function. DESIGN A multicenter, randomized, controlled, pilot clinical trial. PARTICIPANTS The 120 patients enrolled in the CNVPT. Patients had signs of choroidal neovascularization or retinal pigment epithelial detachment in 1 eye and had >/=10 large (>63- micro m) drusen in the contralateral, or fellow, eye. INTERVENTION The fellow eye of 59 patients was assigned randomly to argon green laser treatment consisting of multiple 100- micro m spots at least 750 micro m from the center of the fovea. The fellow eye of the remaining 61 patients was assigned randomly to observation. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Change in visual acuity was the primary outcome measure. Incidence of choroidal neovascularization, resolution of drusen, change in contrast threshold, change in critical print size for reading, and incidence of geographic atrophy were secondary outcome measures. RESULTS Throughout 4 years of follow-up, there were no statistically significant differences in change in visual acuity, contrast threshold, critical print size, or incidence of geographic atrophy. With additional follow-up, the large increase in the incidence of choroidal neovascularization observed within 18 months of treatment was maintained; however, by 30 months, the incidence in the two treatment groups was the same. Most drusen resolution in treated eyes occurred within 24 months of the initial treatment. Treated eyes that received higher-intensity laser burns had an increased risk of choroidal neovascularization. Among eyes developing choroidal neovascularization in each treatment group, most lesions (two thirds or more) were composed of occult neovascularization only. CONCLUSIONS Laser treatment as applied in the CNVPT caused an excess risk of choroidal neovascularization in the first year or so after treatment. The increased early incidence of choroidal neovascularization was not associated with either a harmful or beneficial effect in this pilot study.


Ophthalmology | 2001

Microcirculation patterns other than loops and networks in choroidal and ciliary body melanomas.

Robert Folberg; Xue Chen; H. Culver Boldt; Jacob Pe’er; C. Kice Brown; Robert F. Woolson; Andrew J. Maniotis

PURPOSE To provide ophthalmologists and pathologists with expanded criteria for separating patients at high risk of metastatic melanoma from those at low risk on the basis of microcirculation patterns in choroidal and ciliary body melanomas. DESIGN Tissue culture studies and observational case series. PARTICIPANTS The pattern-forming ability of four uveal melanoma cell lines of varying degrees of aggressive behavior was studied in vitro. Histologic sections of 234 eyes removed for choroidal or ciliary body melanoma were studied for the presence of microcirculation patterns. METHODS The study was divided into two phases: the study of histologic sections of eyes removed for choroidal and ciliary body melanomas and observations on the in vitro behavior of cultured melanoma cells of varying degrees of invasive behavior. The presence or absence of each of nine microcirculation patterns was recorded from tissue sections, and interrelationships between different patterns were explored statistically. In vitro reconstitution of patterns and a study of the interrelationships of patterns in histologic sections was carried out. In the in vitro studies, uveal melanoma cell lines of varying degrees of aggressive potential were cultured to observe the development of architectural patterns other than loops and networks. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES In histologic studies, the outcome measure was the conditional probability of detecting loops or networks given the presence or absence of other patterns positive for periodic acid-SCHIFF: For tissue culture studies, the outcome measure was either the development or lack of development of patterns of different shapes in vitro. RESULTS Histologic studies disclosed that given the presence of arcs without or with branching in a tissue section, it is likely that loops or networks will be detected in the same section plane, suggesting that the production of these patterns by aggressive tumor cells reflects a spectrum of architectural potential. In vitro studies confirmed this hypothesis by revealing that highly aggressive and metastatic uveal melanoma cell lines, but not poorly aggressive tumor cell lines, generated parallel channels with and without crosslinking and arcs with and without branching as well as loops and networks. CONCLUSIONS The criteria for separating patients into low- and high-risk categories for metastasis from uveal melanoma should be expanded to include patterns other than loops or networks. In both the pathology laboratory as well as in a clinical setting, the detection of arcs or arcs with branching and parallel channels should prompt a careful search for loops and networks and for crosslinking parallel channels, respectively.


Retina-the Journal of Retinal and Vitreous Diseases | 2011

Intravitreal bevacizumab for treatment of proliferative and nonproliferative type 2 idiopathic macular telangiectasia.

A. Brock Roller; James C. Folk; Narendra M. Patel; H. Culver Boldt; Stephen R. Russell; Michael D. Abràmoff; Vinit B. Mahajan

Purpose: To determine the effect of treatment with intravitreal bevacizumab on retinal thickness and visual acuity in the nonproliferative and proliferative forms of Type 2 idiopathic macular telangiectasia. Methods: Retrospective chart review of clinic patients treated with bevacizumab for macular telangiectasia Type 2. Treatment was performed until no further changes were seen after repeated bevacizumab injections. All patients had Snellen visual acuity testing, fundus fluorescein angiography, and measurement of central macular thickness by optical coherence tomography at baseline. Visual acuity and central macular thickness were recorded at follow-up visits. Results: Fourteen eyes of 10 patients were included. In 5 eyes with nonproliferative macular telangiectasia Type 2, average follow-up was 17 months (±7 months), and no eye demonstrated improvement in visual acuity or decrease in central macular thickness at final follow-up compared with baseline. In 9 eyes with proliferative disease, follow-up averaged 17 months (±9 months). At 6 weeks, central macular thickness decreased 63 μm (±58 μm), and acuity improved 1.7 lines (±2 lines). At final follow-up, central macular thickness decreased 48 μm (±89 μm) and acuity improved 1.1 lines (±3 lines). Subretinal neovascularization resolved in eight of nine eyes with proliferative disease after treatment. Conclusion: Bevacizumab did not improve acuity or reduce retinal thickness in nonproliferative macular telangiectasia Type 2 at final follow-up. In proliferative macular telangiectasia Type 2, bevacizumab caused involution of neovascularization and improved visual acuity.

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Andrew G. Lee

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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David R. P. Almeida

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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Eric K. Chin

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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Ryan M. Tarantola

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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