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Featured researches published by Mohamad-Reza Dana.


Ophthalmology | 1996

Prognosticators for visual outcome in sarcoid uveitis

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Jesus Merayo-Lloves; Debra A. Schaumberg; C. Stephen Foster

PURPOSEnThe purpose of the study is to delineate the visual prognosticators in sarcoid-associated uveitis given the current standards of care.nnnMETHODSnThe records of 60 patients with sarcoid-associated uveitis who were observed for at least 6 months were studied retrospectively. Multivariate regression models using the generalized estimating equations approach to adjust for the correlation between fellow eyes were applied to determine disease, patient, and treatment characteristics that altered the odds of visual rehabilitation.nnnRESULTSnOne hundred twelve eyes of 43 women and 17 men who met the inclusion criteria were identified. Seventy-seven percent of patients were white, 15% black, and 8% of Hispanic origin. Uveitis developed in the patients at a mean age of 42 (range, 4-82) years. Of the 112 affected eyes, 81% had granulomatous and 15% nongranulomatous uveitis. Most patients (66%) had anterior or intermediate uveitis alone. Ninety-one percent had chronically smoldering disease; another 7% had recurrent flares, and only 1 patient had a monophasic acute course to her uveitis. Vision-threatening complications developed in many patients, including 58% in whom cystoid macular edema developed and 25% in whom media opacities developed, requiring cataract surgery or vitrectomy or both. Overall, 34% of treated eyes and 51% of patients had final visual acuities that were superior to their acuities at presentation. The factors most significantly associated with a final visual acuity of worse than 20/40 after controlling for potential confounders were as follows: delay in presentation to a subspecialist (odds ratio [OR] = 2.94, P = 0.05), total duration of uveitis (OR = 1.04, P = 0.09), development of cystoid macular edema (OR = 0.37, P = 0.07) or glaucoma (OR = 4.54, P = 0.02), presence of intermediate (OR = 5.00, P = 0.01) or posterior uveitis (OR = 8.33, P = 0.04), and systemic steroid use (OR = 0.30, P = 0.03) were the parameters most strongly correlated with a lack of visual acuity improvement. Delay in presentation to a subspecialist (OR = 20.00, P = 0.01), development of glaucoma (OR = 50.00, P = 0.005), presence of intermediate (OR = 25.00, P = 0.02) or posterior uveitis (OR = 50.00, P = 0.02), black race (OR = 11.11, P = 0.02), (log) visual acuity at presentation (OR = 0.05, P = 0.0001), and use of systemic steroids (OR = 0.07, P = 0.02).nnnCONCLUSIONnMultivariate outcomes analysis, particularly after correcting for the correlation between fellow eyes, is a useful analytic tool for optimization of standards of care and for disease risk stratification to aid both physicians and patients.


Cornea | 1995

Corneal neovascularization after penetrating keratoplasty

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Debra A. Schaumberg; Vera O. Kowal; Matthew B. Goren; Christopher J. Rapuano; Peter R. Laibson; Elisabeth J. Cohen

The purpose of this study was to delineate the patient and surgical factors that contribute to the development of corneal neovascularization (CNV) after penetrating keratoplasty (PK). Thirty-six eyes of 36 patients with no antecedent CNV were enrolled in the study. Grafts were sutured to the host with 16 10–0 nylon sutures with the knots buried alternately in either the host or donor corneal stroma. Multiple perioperative factors were recorded for each patient, and at each postoperative visit systematic corneal drawings were used to follow the development of neovascularization. The stroma adjacent to each suture of each graft was given a neovascularization score based on the extent of vessel growth toward the wound interface. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed, including generalized estimating equations logistic regression where each eye is considered a cluster of observations. Thirty-four patients without preoperative CNV or inflammation were followed prospectively for 6–9 (mean, 7) months after PK. Fourteen eyes (41%) developed some degree of CNV. Indication for keratoplasty, age, gender, phakic status, and size of donor button were not risk factors for CNV development. The most significant risk factor identified for any degree of CNV was placement of the suture knot in the host stroma (p = 0.00007), with the overall relative risk of CNV associated with these knots over 2 (95% confidence interval, 1.1–4.2). Furthermore, the mean recipient size in eyes with postoperative CNV was larger than eyes that did not develop neovascularization (p = 0.015), and active blepharitis was associated with a fivefold increase in the risk of developing CNV to the wound edge (p = 0.008). Embedding suture knots in the host stroma, active blepharitis, and a large recipient bed are significantly associated with postkeratoplasty CNV.


Cornea | 1995

Positive Donor Rim Culture in Penetrating Keratoplasty

Jose A.P. Gomes; Mohamad-Reza Dana; Harminder S Dua; Matthew B. Goren; Peter R. Laibson; Elisabeth J. Cohen

A 3-year retrospective study on the risk factors of positive donor rim cultures in penetrating keratoplasty was performed. One thousand and ninety-seven consecutive donor rim cultures were reviewed from the period between June 1990 and October 1993 to determine the rate of culture positivity. The sex, age, diabetes status, use of respirator at time of death, cause of death, harvesting technique, storage time, and corneal storage medium utilized for the donors with positive donor rim culture were compared to those for 100 randomly selected culture negative donor controls. Logistic analysis was performed to eliminate confounding effects. Forty-six of the 1,097 (4.19%) donor rim cultures were positive. We found an association between the in situ technique for donor harvesting and culture negativity (p = 0.03). None of the other donor characteristics was associated with culture positivity. None of the 46 recipients who received the positive culture corneas developed endophthalmitis. In situ cornea harvesting promotes less contamination than enucleation and enriched gentamicin and streptomycin storage medium may further decrease donor rim culture positivity.


Ophthalmology | 1993

Spontaneous and traumatic vitreous hemorrhage.

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Marc S. Werner; Marlos Viana; Michael J. Shapiro

PURPOSEnThe authors sought to provide relevant data regarding the demographic and clinical aspects of spontaneous and traumatic vitreous hemorrhages to guide clinicians in better delineating the expected etiologic patterns of these hemorrhages in an urban environment.nnnMETHODSnThe records of 253 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed vitreous hemorrhage seen in a general eye clinic were selected for retrospective analysis. To minimize selection bias of a tertiary care center, patients who were referred to the clinic by outside ophthalmologists for vitreoretinal consultation or those with a history of recent intraocular surgery, postoperative complications, or loss to follow-up were excluded from study. Demographic, ocular, and general medical variables were tabulated for the 200 patients (230 eyes) who met our inclusion criteria.nnnRESULTSnFifty percent of the patients were black, 26% were white, 23% were Hispanic, and 1% was Oriental. The causes of vitreous hemorrhage were proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) (35.2%), trauma (18.3%), retinal vein occlusion (7.4%), retinal tear without a detachment (7.0%), posterior vitreous detachment (6.5%), proliferative sickle retinopathy (5.7%), retinal tear with a detachment (4.8%), subretinal neovascularization from macular degeneration (2.2%), hypertensive retinopathy (1.7%), unknown (2.5%), and other causes (8.7%). Among black patients with spontaneous vitreous hemorrhage, sickle cell retinopathy and retinal vein occlusion were major causes, each accounting for more than 15% of the cases. Systemic hypertension was associated with vitreous hemorrhage from retinal vein occlusion.nnnCONCLUSIONnThe authors propose that despite the wide array of causative factors of vitreous hemorrhage, the evaluation of demographic, ocular, and medical variables can significantly aid clinicians in identifying its etiologic patterns.


Cornea | 1995

Suture erosion after penetrating keratoplasty.

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Matthew B. Goren; Jose A.P. Gomes; Peter R. Laibson; Christopher J. Rapuano; Elisabeth J. Cohen

Because suture erosion after keratoplasty is an important risk factor for inflammation, infection, vascularization, and graft rejection, we aimed to delineate patient characteristics associated with these erosions. One hundred eyes of 97 consecutive patients who presented to our service with 10-0 nylon suture erosion after keratoplasty were selected for study. Patient age, preoperative diagnosis, duration from surgery, location and type of eroded suture, vascularity of recipient bed, contact lens or topical steroid use, and presence of infiltrate at the erosion site and subsequent culture results were tabulated. The average duration from keratoplasty to presentation was 33 (range 1-144) months. The locations of the eroded sutures were superior in 53%, nasal in 17%, temporal in 16%, and inferior in 14% of eyes (p<0.005). Seventy-one percent of the eyes presented with broken sutures (an average 36 months postoperatively) and 29% with intact but loosened eroded sutures (an average 25 months postoperatively, p<0.05). Sixty-nine percent of the eyes were being treated with topical steroids and presented 11 months earlier (29 months postoperatively) than did those not being treated with topical steroids (40 months postoperatively, p<0.05). Eyes that had been subjected to keratoplasty for inflammatory conditions presented with suture erosion 10 months earlier than did those that had been subjected to keratoplasty for noninflammatory conditions (p=0.09). Of the 10 eyes with a suture-related stromal infiltrate, one was culture-positive. Increased elapsed time from surgery, superior position of the suture, topical steroid use, and inflammatory ocular disorders are associated with suture erosions after penetrating keratoplasty.


Ophthalmology | 1994

Dynamic Shifts in Corneal Topography after Radial and Transverse Keratotomy

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Marlos Viana; Marek Mori; John W. Chandler; Timothy T. McMahon

PURPOSEnThe authors aimed to quantitate the dynamic patterns of change in corneal topography after multistaged radial and transverse keratotomy using digitized video-keratography.nnnMETHODSnSingle and paired radial and transverse keratotomies, with videokeratoscopy between each stage and at the end of the procedure, were performed on fresh animal cadaver eyes using an artificial orbit system.nnnRESULTSnAll incisions led to central flattening. A single radial keratotomy caused flattening adjacent to the incision, and steepening 180 degrees away. A paired radial keratotomy caused increased flattening in the meridian of the incisions, and less flattening 90 degrees away. A single transverse incision caused steepening adjacent to the incision and diffuse flattening elsewhere. A paired transverse incision caused flattening near the optical center along the meridian bisecting the incisions and steepening 90 degrees away.nnnCONCLUSIONnThe authors have demonstrated that computerized videokeratography can be used successfully to systematically quantitate dioptric shifts in multiple hemimeridians and measurement zone diameters after refractive surgery.


Ophthalmology | 1995

The Indications for and Outcome in Pediatric Keratoplasty

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Andrew L. Moyes; Jose A.P. Gomes; Kay Rosheim; Debra A. Schaumberg; Peter R. Laibson; Edward J. Holland; Alan Sugar; Joel Sugar


Archives of Ophthalmology | 1994

Ocular Manifestations of Leprosy in a Noninstitutionalized Community in the United States

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Michael A. Hochman; Marlos Viana; Carlotta H. Hill; Joel Sugar


Archives of Ophthalmology | 1995

Outcome of Penetrating Keratoplasty After Ocular Trauma in Children

Mohamad-Reza Dana; Debra A. Schaumberg; Andrew L. Moyes; Jose A.P. Gomes; Peter R. Laibson; Edward J. Holland; Alan Sugar; Joel Sugar


Ophthalmology | 1994

Is Smoking a Risk Factor for Nonarteritic AION

Debra A. Schaumberg; Mohamad-Reza Dana

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Joel Sugar

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Marlos Viana

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Alan Sugar

University of Michigan

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