Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos.

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of angle-closure glaucoma (ACG) is greater for Eskimos/Inuit than it is for any other ethnic group in the world. Although it has been suggested that this prevalence may be due to a population tendency toward shallower anterior chamber angles, available evidence for other p...

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Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2003
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Online Access:https://pure.qub.ac.uk/en/publications/5db4a435-3c04-4af7-b30c-26a063638ea7
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spelling ftqueensubelpubl:oai:pure.qub.ac.uk/portal:publications/5db4a435-3c04-4af7-b30c-26a063638ea7 2024-01-14T10:06:36+01:00 Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos. 2003 https://pure.qub.ac.uk/en/publications/5db4a435-3c04-4af7-b30c-26a063638ea7 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Wojciechowski R, Congdon N, Anninger W, Teo Broman A. 2003 , ' Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos. ' , Ophthalmology . article 2003 ftqueensubelpubl 2023-12-21T23:27:40Z BACKGROUND: The prevalence of angle-closure glaucoma (ACG) is greater for Eskimos/Inuit than it is for any other ethnic group in the world. Although it has been suggested that this prevalence may be due to a population tendency toward shallower anterior chamber angles, available evidence for other populations such as Chinese with high rates of ACG has not consistently demonstrated such a tendency. METHODS: A reticule, slit-lamp, and standard Goldmann one-mirror goniolens were used to make measurements in the anterior chamber (AC) angle according to a previously reported protocol for biometric gonioscopy (BG) (Ophthalmology 1999;106:2161-7). Measurements were made in all four quadrants of one eye among 133 phakic Alaskan Eskimos aged 40 years and older. Automatic refraction, dilated examination of the anterior segment and optic nerve, and A-scan measurements of AC depth, lens thickness, and axial length were also carried out for all subjects. RESULTS: Both central and peripheral AC measurements for the Eskimo subjects were significantly lower than those previously reported by us for Chinese, blacks, and whites under the identical protocol. Eskimos also seemed to have somewhat more hyperopia. There were no differences in biometric measurements between men and women in this Eskimo population. Angle measurements by BG seemed to decline more rapidly over life among Eskimos and Chinese than blacks or whites. Although there was a significant apparent decrease in AC depth, increase in lens thickness, and increase in hyperopia with age among Eskimos, all of these trends seemed to reverse in the seventh decade and beyond. CONCLUSIONS: Eskimos do seem to have shallower ACs than do other racial groups. Measurements of the AC angle seem to decline more rapidly over life among Eskimos than among blacks or whites, a phenomenon also observed by us among Chinese, another group with high ACG prevalence. This apparent more rapid decline may be due to a cohort effect with higher prevalence of myopia and resulting wider angles among ... Article in Journal/Newspaper eskimo* inuit Queen's University Belfast Research Portal
institution Open Polar
collection Queen's University Belfast Research Portal
op_collection_id ftqueensubelpubl
language English
description BACKGROUND: The prevalence of angle-closure glaucoma (ACG) is greater for Eskimos/Inuit than it is for any other ethnic group in the world. Although it has been suggested that this prevalence may be due to a population tendency toward shallower anterior chamber angles, available evidence for other populations such as Chinese with high rates of ACG has not consistently demonstrated such a tendency. METHODS: A reticule, slit-lamp, and standard Goldmann one-mirror goniolens were used to make measurements in the anterior chamber (AC) angle according to a previously reported protocol for biometric gonioscopy (BG) (Ophthalmology 1999;106:2161-7). Measurements were made in all four quadrants of one eye among 133 phakic Alaskan Eskimos aged 40 years and older. Automatic refraction, dilated examination of the anterior segment and optic nerve, and A-scan measurements of AC depth, lens thickness, and axial length were also carried out for all subjects. RESULTS: Both central and peripheral AC measurements for the Eskimo subjects were significantly lower than those previously reported by us for Chinese, blacks, and whites under the identical protocol. Eskimos also seemed to have somewhat more hyperopia. There were no differences in biometric measurements between men and women in this Eskimo population. Angle measurements by BG seemed to decline more rapidly over life among Eskimos and Chinese than blacks or whites. Although there was a significant apparent decrease in AC depth, increase in lens thickness, and increase in hyperopia with age among Eskimos, all of these trends seemed to reverse in the seventh decade and beyond. CONCLUSIONS: Eskimos do seem to have shallower ACs than do other racial groups. Measurements of the AC angle seem to decline more rapidly over life among Eskimos than among blacks or whites, a phenomenon also observed by us among Chinese, another group with high ACG prevalence. This apparent more rapid decline may be due to a cohort effect with higher prevalence of myopia and resulting wider angles among ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
title Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos.
spellingShingle Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos.
title_short Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos.
title_full Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos.
title_fullStr Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos.
title_full_unstemmed Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos.
title_sort age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among alaskan eskimos.
publishDate 2003
url https://pure.qub.ac.uk/en/publications/5db4a435-3c04-4af7-b30c-26a063638ea7
genre eskimo*
inuit
genre_facet eskimo*
inuit
op_source Wojciechowski R, Congdon N, Anninger W, Teo Broman A. 2003 , ' Age, gender, biometry, refractive error, and the anterior chamber angle among Alaskan Eskimos. ' , Ophthalmology .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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