Atlas of ocular blood flow : vascular anatomy, pathophysiology, and metabolism

Author(s)

    • Harris, Alon

Bibliographic Information

Atlas of ocular blood flow : vascular anatomy, pathophysiology, and metabolism

Alon Harris ... [et al.]

Butterworth-Heinemann/Elsevier, c2010

2nd ed

  • : hbk

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This text examines the vascular anatomy and physiology of the eye as well as the assessment of ocular circulation in health and disease. It offers a cutting-edge analysis of the eye's blood supply and how it is affected by conditions such as glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration, and diabetic retinopathy. 425 illustrations -- including 250 in full color -- detail anatomy, techniques, the results of imaging studies, and more. Gain a clear understanding of the anatomy/physiology of the blood supply to and within the eye to help make more effective clinical decisions. Analyze the potential effects of blood flow changes in various eye illnesses to see how they are influenced by diseases like glaucoma and age-related macular degeneration. Rely on the extensive experience of the authors in implementing new technologies to better access ocular circulation. Diagnose ocular, systemic, or medication-related conditions in patients by measuring their ocular blood flow. Master the newest techniques and glimpse new technologies that will be available for assessing ocular blood flow in the future. Visualize anatomy, techniques, and imaging findings with more than 400 illustrations.

Table of Contents

  • I. Ocular vasculature, anatomical structure and function 1. Anatomy (different illustrations on anatomical structures in the orbit) a. Description of vasculature (and anatomic variations) beginning from the heart to the ophthalmic vein b. Innervation 2. Vascular physiology: Controls in general terms a. Innervation b. Autoregulation (e.g., intracular pressure) c. Relationship between blood pressure and blood flow in these vessels d. Intraocular pressure and blood flow to these vessels e. Different influencing factors (e.g. mediators of vessel dilation, vasoconstrictors) with diagrams showing affection of vessels 3. Pathophysiology a. Loss of innervation (Horner syndrome b. Ion channel dysfunction (theory) c. Vasospasm (clinical observation, cold hand, migraine, raynaud) d. Gas perturbations (hyperoxia, hypoxia, hypercapnia) and pharmacology II. Principles of technology (including diagrams) 4. Ultrasound a. Physical basics and anatomical description with illustrations b. History/early measurements c. Contemporary measurements d. Clinical examples 5. Angiography a. Physical basics and anatomical description b. History/early measurements c. Contemporary measurements d. Clinical 6. Laser Doppler technologies a. Physical basics and amatomical description b. History/early measurements c. Comtemporary measurements d. Clinical examples 7. Pulsatility based techniques a. Physical basics and anatomical description b. History/early measurements c. Contemporary measurements d. Clinical examples III. Principal applicability to diseases (examples of altered circulation) 8. Glaucoma (visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, visual fields, blood flow) a. POAG b. NTG c. CACG d. Other
  • one image per subdivision 9. Age-related macular degeneration a. One photo per stage, beginning with pigment shift, ending with subretinal meovascularization 10. Diabetic retinopathy 11. Arteriitic and non-arteriitic ischemic neuropathy 12. Vascular occlusions a. Arterial occulusion b. Vein occlusion c. Partial vessel occlusion (one-vessel-branch) d. Remaining macular vessel 13. Infections a. Histoplasmosis b. CMV c. Toxoplasmosis d. Any other infection related to blood flow disorders 14. Degenerative diseases a. Retinitis pigmentosa b. Any other disease related to vascular disorders (eg, vaskulitis) IV. New techniques and their future application

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