This book presents a new avenue in the field of ophthalmology and sheds light on the field of eye imaging. With the increasing availability of electronic devices and their important role in both personal and professional aspects of human life, there is a growing need for perfect vision. Ophthalmic imaging is a major tool for screening and documenting eye diseases in both medical and surgical fields of ophthalmology and is also of use for ophthalmologists around the globe.
The number of eye-imaging devices has increased dramatically, however undiagnosed or poorly managed eye diseases remain a significant cause of ocular and visual problems worldwide. This essential guide addresses the need for a book that is dedicated to ophthalmic imaging, covering the cornea, glaucoma, retina and orbital imaging with updates on medical and surgical aspects of the topic.
Part
1. Corneal Imaging : Topography Versus Tomography.
Chapter
1.
Topographic Pattern Recognition: Normal Versus Keratoconus.
Chapter
2.
Orbscan.
Chapter
3. Pentacam.-
Chapter
4. Galilei Dual Scheimpflug
Analyzer.
Chapter
5. Sirius.
Chapter
6. MS39.- Part
2. Nontopographic
Corneal Imaging.
Chapter
7. Anterior Segment Optical Coherence Tomography.-
Chapter
8. Corneal Biomechanics.
Chapter
9. Ultrasound Biomicroscopy
(UBM).
Chapter
10. Confocal Scan.
Chapter
11. Aberration, Aberrometry and
Aberrometers.- Part
3. Retina Imaging.
Chapter
12. Optical Coherence
Tomography (OCT).
Chapter
13. OCT Angiography (OCT-A).
Chapter
14.
Fluorescein Angiography.
Chapter
15. Indocyanine Green Angiography (ICGA).-
Chapter
16. Ultrasonography (B-Scan) and Ultrasound Biomicroscopy (UBM) in
Retinal Diseases.
Chapter
17. Age-Related Macular Degeneration (ARMD).-
Chapter
18. Central Serous Chorioretinopathy (CSC).
Chapter
19.
Vitreoretinal Interface Abnormality.
Chapter
20. Diabetic Retinopathy and
Retinal Vascular Diseases.
Chapter 21.Uveitis.
Chapter
22. Adult Ocular
Tumor.
Chapter
23. Childhood Intraocular Tumors.
Chapter
24. Degenerative
Retinal Disorders.- Part
4. Glaucoma Imaging .
Chapter
25. OCT and Glaucoma:
Interpretation.
Chapter
26. OCT and Glaucoma: Case Review.
Chapter
27.
Confocal Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscopy and Glaucoma.
Chapter
28. OCT
Artifacts in Glaucoma.
Chapter
29. Anterior Segment Optical Coherence
Tomography and Glaucoma.- Part
5. Orbital Imaging.
Chapter
30. Imaging in
Orbital Disorders.
Dr. Mehrdad Mohammadpour, Ophthalmologist, Cornea Consultant expert in LASIK and corneal transplantation, and intraocular lens implantation for cataract surgery and treatment of presbyopia and keratoconus.
In 1989, he was graduated from the college of Alborz and in the same year attended the medical school of the University of Tehran as a medical student. After graduating from the university in 1996, he was accepted as an ophthalmology resident after the military service period. He started the ophthalmology and then succeeded in completing the specialty of the cornea, cataract, refractive surgery, keratoconus, and corneal transplantation.
-Since 2003, he has performed successfully more than tens of thousands of eye surgeries and more than 100 scientific papers on the field of ophthalmology have been published in the most trusted European and American ophthalmology journals by him.He has trained more than 200 ophthalmology residents and fellows as a faculty member .He is also the referee of the most reputable ophthalmology journals all around the world. He is the initiator of several new ophthalmologic surgeries and the first nano-ophthalmology invention in Iran. He is a faculty member and consultant in the most important Educational Eye School University of Tehran Farabi Hospital teaching students and specialist doctors of ophthalmology. He also has one of the highest indexes in referring to ophthalmic articles and is currently an associate professor of ophthalmology at the ophthalmology department of Tehran University of Medical Sciences.