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van den Bosch Jacqueline J O N

πŸ‡£πŸ‡€ Otto-von-Guericke-UniversitΓ€t Magdeburg
ORCIDOpenAlex5 articles in GJC

5 articles in GJC

1.

Assessment of the effect of physical activity on intraocular pressure using a novel implanted telemetric pressure sensor.

Pennisi Vincenzo, van den Bosch Jacqueline J O N, Neustaeter Anna, Ehmer Angela, Thieme Hagen, Hoffmann Michael B et al.

Br J OphthalmolSep 20250 citationsClinical Trial

This study found that physical exercise temporarily increases intraocular pressure in glaucoma patients, returning to or below baseline post-exercise, suggesting a linked physiological response.

2.

Reproducibility of consecutive automated telemetric noctodiurnal IOP profiles as determined by an intraocular implant.

van den Bosch Jacqueline J O N, Pennisi Vincenzo, Rao Harsha Laxmana, Mansouri Kaweh, Weinreb Robert, Thieme Hagen et al.

Br J OphthalmolOct 20240 citationsClinical Trial

This study found 24-hour telemetric IOP profiles are reproducible on consecutive days, and somewhat with self-measurements. This offers a valuable alternative to frequent in-office IOP checks for glaucoma management.

3.

Effect of eyelid muscle action and rubbing on telemetrically obtained intraocular pressure in patients with glaucoma with an IOP sensor implant.

van den Bosch Jacqueline J O N, Pennisi Vincenzo, Mansouri Kaweh, Weinreb Robert N, Thieme Hagen, Hoffmann Michael B et al.

Br J OphthalmolJun 202212 citationsClinical Trial

This study measured intraocular pressure (IOP) in glaucoma patients during eyelid movements. Eyelid rubbing and squeezing caused significant, brief IOP spikes (up to 59 mmHg), highlighting a potential risk for glaucoma progression.

4.

Implanted Microsensor Continuous IOP Telemetry Suggests Gaze and Eyelid Closure Effects on IOP-A Preliminary Study.

van den Bosch Jacqueline J O N, Pennisi Vincenzo, Invernizzi Azzurra, Mansouri Kaweh, Weinreb Robert N, Thieme Hagen et al.

Invest Ophthalmol Vis SciMay 20217 citationsClinical Trial

This study found implanted IOP sensors show eye pressure varies with gaze direction, increasing in upgaze and decreasing with inferonasal gaze or eyelid closure, impacting glaucoma monitoring.

5.

Use of a novel telemetric sensor to study interactions of intraocular pressure and ganglion-cell function in glaucoma.

Al-Nosairy Khaldoon O, van den Bosch Jacqueline J O N, Pennisi Vincenzo, Mansouri Kaweh, Thieme Hagen, Choritz Lars et al.

Br J OphthalmolJul 20209 citationsClinical Trial

This study explored simultaneous IOP and ganglion cell function (PERG) using an implanted sensor. It found lateral positioning affects both IOP and PERG, suggesting this model can help understand how IOP impacts ganglion cells in glaucoma.

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