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Camp Andrew S

9 articles in GJC

9 articles in GJC

1.

Comparison of a Novel Ultra-Widefield Three-Color Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscope to Other Retinal Imaging Modalities in Chorioretinal Lesion Imaging.

Nagel Ines D, Heinke Anna, Agnihotri Akshay P, Yassin Shaden, Cheng Lingyun, Camp Andrew S et al.

Transl Vis Sci TechnolJan 20256 citationsObservational Study

This study found a novel three-wavelength ultra-widefield imager (Optos RGB) generally provided more accurate retinal/optic nerve lesion imaging than other modalities, except for melanocytic choroidal lesions where two-wavelength imaging (RG) was superior.

2.

Usability and Clinician Acceptance of a Deep Learning-Based Clinical Decision Support Tool for Predicting Glaucomatous Visual Field Progression.

Chen Jimmy S, Baxter Sally L, van den Brandt Astrid, Lieu Alexander, Camp Andrew S, Do Jiun L et al.

J GlaucomaDec 202210 citationsObservational Study

This study found ophthalmologists generally accept an AI tool predicting glaucoma visual field progression as useful, though less for severe cases, suggesting potential for integrating AI into clinical decision-making.

5.

Qualitative Evaluation of the 10-2 and 24-2 Visual Field Tests for Detecting Central Visual Field Abnormalities in Glaucoma.

Orbach Adi, Ang Ghee Soon, Camp Andrew S, Welsbie Derek S, Medeiros Felipe A, Girkin Christopher A et al.

Am J OphthalmolFeb 202116 citationsCross-Sectional Study

Expert qualitative assessment showed the 10-2 and central 24-2 visual fields similarly detect glaucoma's central abnormalities. The 10-2's higher density didn't improve detection, suggesting its routine use needs further validation.

9.

Structural correlation between the nerve fiber layer and retinal ganglion cell loss in mice with targeted disruption of the Brn3b gene.

Camp Andrew S, Ruggeri Marco, Munguba Gustavo C, Tapia Mary L, John Simon W M, Bhattacharya Sanjoy K et al.

Invest Ophthalmol Vis SciJul 201123 citationsBasic Science

This study in Brn3b knockout mice found a strong correlation between OCT-measured retinal nerve fiber layer/inner plexiform layer thickness and actual retinal ganglion cell loss, validating OCT for monitoring RGC degeneration.

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