Hanyuda Akiko
In this database
8
2015 โ 2025
DB Citations
36
across indexed articles
h-index
โ
Not available
Total Citations
โ
Not available
8 articles in Glaucoma Journal Club
Long-term Alcohol Consumption and Risk of Exfoliation Glaucoma or Glaucoma Suspect Status among United States Health Professionals.
Long-term alcohol consumption was associated with a higher risk of XFG/XFGS status. Our findings provide further clues regarding the XFG/XFGS etiology.
Symptomatic Presbyopia may Develop Earlier in Patients With Glaucoma-A Cross-Sectional Retrospective Cohort Study.
Glaucoma patients treated with eye drops may start near correction earlier.
The Clinical Usefulness of a Glaucoma Polygenic Risk Score in 4 Population-Based European Ancestry Cohorts.
Incorporating a PRS into a POAG predictive model improves identification concordance from 0.75 up to 0.82, supporting its potential for guiding more cost-effective screening strategies.
Association Between Glycemic Traits and Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma: A Mendelian Randomization Study in the Japanese Population.
We did not observe strong evidence to support the association between genetically predicted glycemic traits and POAG in the Japanese population.
Prospective study of dietary intake of branched-chain amino acids and the risk of primary open-angle glaucoma.
Higher dietary intake of BCAA was not associated with POAG risk.
Presbyopia Progression From the Age of 40 to 79 Years in Glaucoma Patients Treated With Prostaglandin F Receptor Agonists.
There was an earlier progression of presbyopia determined by near add power in glaucoma patients treated with FP receptor agonists compared with controls.
Metabolomic Profiling of Open-Angle Glaucoma Etiologic Endotypes: Tohoku Multi-Omics Glaucoma Study.
Integrated metabolomic profiles identified five distinct etiologic endotypes of OAG, suggesting pathological mechanisms related with a high-risk group of central vision loss progression in the Japanese population.
Nailfold Capillary Abnormalities in Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma: A Multisite Study.
These data provided support for nonocular capillary bed abnormalities in POAG. Comparable vascular abnormalities in the optic nerve may render it susceptible to glaucomatous damage.