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      Issues in the epidemiology and population-based screening of primary angle-closure glaucoma

      , ,
      Survey of Ophthalmology
      Elsevier BV

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          Racial variations in the prevalence of primary open-angle glaucoma. The Baltimore Eye Survey.

          --To compare the prevalence of primary open-angle glaucoma between black and white Americans. --The design was a population-based prevalence survey of a noninstitutionalized black and white population aged 40 years or older from the eastern and southeastern health districts of Baltimore, Md. A multistage random sampling strategy was used to identify 7104 eligible participants, of whom 5308 (2395 blacks, 2913 whites) received an ophthalmologic screening examination. Those with abnormalities were referred for definitive diagnostic evaluation. --Primary open-angle glaucoma was defined based on evidence of glaucomatous optic nerve damage, including abnormal visual fields and/or severe optic disc cupping, and was independent of intraocular pressure. --Age-adjusted prevalence rates for primary open-angle glaucoma were four to five times higher in blacks as compared with whites. Rates among blacks ranged from 1.23% in those aged 40 through 49 years to 11.26% in those 80 years or older, whereas rates for whites ranged from 0.92% to 2.16%, respectively. There was no difference in rates of primary open-angle glaucoma between men and women for either blacks or whites in this population. Based on these data, an estimated 1.6 million persons aged 40 years or older in the United States have primary open-angle glaucoma. --Black Americans are at higher risk of primary open-angle glaucoma than their white neighbors. This may reflect an underlying genetic susceptibility to this disease and indicates that additional efforts are needed to identify and treat this sight-threatening disorder in high-risk communities.
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            Aetiology of the anatomical basis for primary angle-closure glaucoma. Biometrical comparisons between normal eyes and eyes with primary angle-closure glaucoma.

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              Intra-ocular pressure, glaucoma, and glaucoma suspects in a defined population.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Survey of Ophthalmology
                Survey of Ophthalmology
                Elsevier BV
                00396257
                May 1992
                May 1992
                : 36
                : 6
                : 411-423
                Article
                10.1016/S0039-6257(05)80022-0
                11f1eeea-ee00-41ce-84ac-2ca90cb7dea1
                © 1992

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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