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JAWS NNUAL INDEX VOLUME 130 A guide to articles, authors and "You Make the Call" answers from our 1993 issues. When Meds Disrupt Contact Lens Wear—No. 4, p. 49 When White and Quiet Turns Red and Angry—No. 4, p. 42 SUBJECT I DEX Why Soft Toric Fits Aren’t Going Soft—No. 6, p. 45 CONTACT LENS Q&A CASE REPORTS Are Soft Eyes and Rigid Lenses Compatible?—No. 7, p. 93 Atypical EKC: Infiltrates in One Eye, Filaments in the Are You Liable if the Lens Has your Label?—No. 4, p. 101 Other—No. 7, p. 80 Can Polishes be All Things to All Lenses?—No. 8, p. 105 Courting Disaster: Racquetball Injury Triggers Hyphema— Contact Lens Abrasions Need Protecting—No. 10, p. 89 No. 9, p. 83 The Cure Can be Worse if there's Fungus Around—No. 12, Dilated Exam Reveals Idiopathic Macular Hole, Atrophic p. 51 Cyst—No. 4, p. 87 A Curious Finding, But not a Serious One—No. 10, p. 89 Dilated Fundus Exam Reveals Early Signs of Coats’ Dis- An Easy Way to Read Diffractive Bifocal Powers?—No. 6, ease—No. 5, p. 115 p. 101 Eyestrain Looms Large in Marfan's Syndrome—No. 12, p. Eyes Have Become Comfortably Numb—No. 3, p. 103 Fitting Lenses after Refractive Surgery: RK v. PRK—No. Hemorrhage Due to Preeclampsia Leads to Vision Loss— 5, p. 137 No. 5, p. 116 Is Nasalcrom OK for the Eyes?—No. 4, p. 101 1993 Student Case Report Challenge Winners Is Rotation Causing Cylinder—Power—Effect Troubles?— Field Loss Signals Metastasis from Breast Carcinoma— No. 6, p. 101 No. 3, p. 82 A Need for More Study Underscores Ortho—K knowl- Overweight Woman Suffers Recurrent Pseudotumor edge—No. 12, p. 51 Cerebri—No. 3, p. 86 OK-—3 Lens: Indications and Considerations—No. 5, p. 137 Painful Eye Signals Thyroid Dysfunction—No. 3, p. 92 On the Other Hand, You Wouldn't Need Your Morning Teen Troubled by Toxoplasmosis—No. 3, p. 89 Coffee—No. 8, p. 105 Perilous Plunge: Bungee Jump Results in Ocular Trauma— Prosthetic Lenses Can Make a Small Eye Look Normal— No. 6, p. 87 No. 11, p. 89 Pre—Retinal Arterial Loop Triggers Branch Artery Occlu- Rocky Mountain High Incidence of Discomfort—No. 7, p. sion—No. 8, p. 91 93 Rare Combination: Globe Dislocation and Keratoconus— RK Surgery Isn't Always the End of Eyeglass Wear—No. No. 11, p. 76 9, p. 95 Rare Dual Finding: Melanocytoma and Optic Pit—No. 9, Rx Releases: How Long are They Good for?—No. 2, p. 95 p. 79 Should You be Ultraconservative about Ultra Violet?—No. Soft Lens, Corneal Mapping Correct Early Keratoconus— 2, p. 95 No. 8, p. 87 Tips for Keeping Soft Trial Lenses Clean—No. 10, p. 89 Tearing, Proptosis are Presenting Signs of Optic Nerve Try Not to be Flexible When Fitting Post-PK—No. 12, p. Tumor—No. 1, p. 83 51 Systemic Steroids Arrest the Advance of Reactivated UV Disinfection Showing Promise—No. |, p. 97 POHS—No. 2, p. 83 Watch Out for Reactions in Aphakic Infants—No. 3, p. 103 Video Equipment Proves [Inexpensive Anisocoria Tester— What Do You Do with an Old Lens Mailer?—No. 1, p. 97 No. 10, p. 75 When Can Keratitis Patients Resume Contact Lens Wear?—No. 9, p. 95 COMPUTING When Do New Corneas Stop Changing?—No. 3, p. 103 A Hard Look at Buying Software—No. 3, p. 31 Personal Finance Programs Tell You Where It All Went— EDITOR'S PAGE No. 11. p. 25 The Bad, the Very Bad, and the Worse—No. 3, p. 21 A Primer for the PC Novice—No. 1, p. 25 Don’t Take the ‘90s Personally—No. 12, p. 13 Software: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly—No. 5, p. 27 Health Care Reform .. . with a Heart—No. 10, p. 19 Something Else You Can Do at the Beach—No. 7, p. 23 Hit ‘em Where They Ain't—No. 9, p. 19 Whatever They’re Called, They’re Really Powerful (PCM- Keep the Vultures Away from Your Practice—No. 5, p. 15 CIA cards)—No. 9, p. 27 Kids Are People, Too—No. 8, p. 19 A Little to Give, A Lot to Gain—No. 6, p. 23 CONTACT LENS FEATURES Our New Year's Resolutions to You—No. 1, p. 17 Can RGP Fits Break through Glass Ceiling?—No. 7, p 53 There's No Time Like Now for Third—Party Plans—No. 2, Contact Lens Care Guide—No. 11, supplement p. 19 Future Fits: The Changes that Challenge—No. 1, p. 47 TPAs Belong in Your Contact Lens Practice—No. 4, p. 25 Guide through the Maze of Bifocal Lenses—No. 10, p. 53 TQM: It's Not Just for the Big Guys—No. 11, p. 17 17th Annual Contact Lens Report: Write, Call, Write, Call, Write, Call ...—No. 7, p. 17 A Battle Plan to Conquer Corneal Ulcers—No. 4, p. 61 Keep Corneal Insults from Getting Nasty—No. 4, p. 53 FEATURES REVIEW OF OPTOMETRY DECEMBER 1993 JAWS NNUAL INDEX VOLUME 130 A guide to articles, authors and "You Make the Call" answers from our 1993 issues. When Meds Disrupt Contact Lens Wear—No. 4, p. 49 When White and Quiet Turns Red and Angry—No. 4, p. 42 SUBJECT I DEX Why Soft Toric Fits Aren’t Going Soft—No. 6, p. 45 CONTACT LENS Q&A CASE REPORTS Are Soft Eyes and Rigid Lenses Compatible?—No. 7, p. 93 Atypical EKC: Infiltrates in One Eye, Filaments in the Are You Liable if the Lens Has your Label?—No. 4, p. 101 Other—No. 7, p. 80 Can Polishes be All Things to All Lenses?—No. 8, p. 105 Courting Disaster: Racquetball Injury Triggers Hyphema— Contact Lens Abrasions Need Protecting—No. 10, p. 89 No. 9, p. 83 The Cure Can be Worse if there's Fungus Around—No. 12, Dilated Exam Reveals Idiopathic Macular Hole, Atrophic p. 51 Cyst—No. 4, p. 87 A Curious Finding, But not a Serious One—No. 10, p. 89 Dilated Fundus Exam Reveals Early Signs of Coats’ Dis- An Easy Way to Read Diffractive Bifocal Powers?—No. 6, ease—No. 5, p. 115 p. 101 Eyestrain Looms Large in Marfan's Syndrome—No. 12, p. Eyes Have Become Comfortably Numb—No. 3, p. 103 Fitting Lenses after Refractive Surgery: RK v. PRK—No. Hemorrhage Due to Preeclampsia Leads to Vision Loss— 5, p. 137 No. 5, p. 116 Is Nasalcrom OK for the Eyes?—No. 4, p. 101 1993 Student Case Report Challenge Winners Is Rotation Causing Cylinder—Power—Effect Troubles?— Field Loss Signals Metastasis from Breast Carcinoma— No. 6, p. 101 No. 3, p. 82 A Need for More Study Underscores Ortho—K knowl- Overweight Woman Suffers Recurrent Pseudotumor edge—No. 12, p. 51 Cerebri—No. 3, p. 86 OK-—3 Lens: Indications and Considerations—No. 5, p. 137 Painful Eye Signals Thyroid Dysfunction—No. 3, p. 92 On the Other Hand, You Wouldn't Need Your Morning Teen Troubled by Toxoplasmosis—No. 3, p. 89 Coffee—No. 8, p. 105 Perilous Plunge: Bungee Jump Results in Ocular Trauma— Prosthetic Lenses Can Make a Small Eye Look Normal— No. 6, p. 87 No. 11, p. 89 Pre—Retinal Arterial Loop Triggers Branch Artery Occlu- Rocky Mountain High Incidence of Discomfort—No. 7, p. sion—No. 8, p. 91 93 Rare Combination: Globe Dislocation and Keratoconus— RK Surgery Isn't Always the End of Eyeglass Wear—No. No. 11, p. 76 9, p. 95 Rare Dual Finding: Melanocytoma and Optic Pit—No. 9, Rx Releases: How Long are They Good for?—No. 2, p. 95 p. 79 Should You be Ultraconservative about Ultra Violet?—No. Soft Lens, Corneal Mapping Correct Early Keratoconus— 2, p. 95 No. 8, p. 87 Tips for Keeping Soft Trial Lenses Clean—No. 10, p. 89 Tearing, Proptosis are Presenting Signs of Optic Nerve Try Not to be Flexible When Fitting Post-PK—No. 12, p. Tumor—No. 1, p. 83 51 Systemic Steroids Arrest the Advance of Reactivated UV Disinfection Showing Promise—No. |, p. 97 POHS—No. 2, p. 83 Watch Out for Reactions in Aphakic Infants—No. 3, p. 103 Video Equipment Proves [Inexpensive Anisocoria Tester— What Do You Do with an Old Lens Mailer?—No. 1, p. 97 No. 10, p. 75 When Can Keratitis Patients Resume Contact Lens Wear?—No. 9, p. 95 COMPUTING When Do New Corneas Stop Changing?—No. 3, p. 103 A Hard Look at Buying Software—No. 3, p. 31 Personal Finance Programs Tell You Where It All Went— EDITOR'S PAGE No. 11. p. 25 The Bad, the Very Bad, and the Worse—No. 3, p. 21 A Primer for the PC Novice—No. 1, p. 25 Don’t Take the ‘90s Personally—No. 12, p. 13 Software: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly—No. 5, p. 27 Health Care Reform .. . with a Heart—No. 10, p. 19 Something Else You Can Do at the Beach—No. 7, p. 23 Hit ‘em Where They Ain't—No. 9, p. 19 Whatever They’re Called, They’re Really Powerful (PCM- Keep the Vultures Away from Your Practice—No. 5, p. 15 CIA cards)—No. 9, p. 27 Kids Are People, Too—No. 8, p. 19 A Little to Give, A Lot to Gain—No. 6, p. 23 CONTACT LENS FEATURES Our New Year's Resolutions to You—No. 1, p. 17 Can RGP Fits Break through Glass Ceiling?—No. 7, p 53 There's No Time Like Now for Third—Party Plans—No. 2, Contact Lens Care Guide—No. 11, supplement p. 19 Future Fits: The Changes that Challenge—No. 1, p. 47 TPAs Belong in Your Contact Lens Practice—No. 4, p. 25 Guide through the Maze of Bifocal Lenses—No. 10, p. 53 TQM: It's Not Just for the Big Guys—No. 11, p. 17 17th Annual Contact Lens Report: Write, Call, Write, Call, Write, Call ...—No. 7, p. 17 A Battle Plan to Conquer Corneal Ulcers—No. 4, p. 61 Keep Corneal Insults from Getting Nasty—No. 4, p. 53 FEATURES REVIEW OF OPTOMETRY DECEMBER 1993 Health Care Reform: Where Optometry Fits—No. 7, p. 58 Opticianry Sets Education Standards—No. 9, p. 7 Kreidler’s Unique Perspective (Interview with Rep. Mike Optometry's Inclusion in Health Care Reform Changing— Kreidler, O.D.)—No. 7, p. 62 No. 12, p. 4 Lessons from North of the Border—No. 7, p. 63 Panel Urges Cataract Cutback—No. 4, p.11 The Many Challenges Facing Women O.D.s—No. 6, p. 63 Researchers Say Surgery Helps ARMD—No. 7, p. 10 Patients Want More Frame for Their Bucks—No. 9, p. 41 RK Surgeries Doubled in Past Year—No. 8, p. 10 Social Contract Upsets Ontario O.D.s—No. 10, p. 11 NATIONAL PANEL REPORTS Sterling and Laservision Join Forces—No. 4, p. 11 Cheap Examinations, Expensive Eyeglasses—No. 10, p. 35 Study: Acuity Unrelated to Vitamins—No. 3, p. 13 Clinton Scores with Panelists—No. 1, p. 10 Study: Many Diabetics Go Unexamined—No. 12, p. 6 Computers Doing More for O.D.s—No. 9, p. 12 Texas Charges Lens Express with False Ads—No. 9, p. 10 Contact Lens Fits on a Jumbled Path—No. 11, p. 10 13 States Plan to Try for TPA Laws—No. 1, p. 7 Economy Not What Panel Had Hoped—No. 7, p. 12 Tinted Lenses May Reduce Headaches—No. 12, p. 8 The ‘Haves’ Have TPAs; So Do Many ‘Have Nots’—No. Virginia O.D. Approved for Lasers—No. 2, p. 11 10, p. 40 Vision Loss Tied to Blood Pressure Drop—No. 6, p. 15 Incomes Show Strength, O.D.s' Attitudes Don't—No. 12, p. Vitamins Play Role in Eye Health—No. 9, p. 8 24 VSP Creates Managed Care Program—No. 11, p. 8 Panelists Lack Third-Party Savvy—No. 2, p. 53 Wal-Mart Ruling No Big Deal to O.D.s—No. 11, p. 6 Panclists Ponder Computerized Exam Room—No. 8, p. 70 Panelists See Progress in M.D. Referrals—No. 3, p. 14 OPERATION: EXCELLENCE RGP Market is Not Bad, say Panelists—No. 4, p. 14 Are You Ready for Hospital Privileges?—-No. 10, p. 31 Staff Expenses Worry Panelists—No. 6, p. 16 A Bottom—Line Approach to Adding a Partner—No. 3, p. 38 NEWS The Case for Optometric Excellence—No. 1, p. 39 AAO Nixed, Cataract PPO Moves On—No. 10, p. 8 Don’t Gainble with Your Marketing Dollars—No. 9, p. 29 AOA, Cataract Group Differ with Study—No. 4, p. 12 Don’t Get Squeezed in a Cash—Flow Crunch—No. 6, p. 33 AOA Irked by Cataract Guidelines—No. 6, p. 10 Don’t Let Collections Get Away from You—No. 5, p. 33 AOA President Looks at What Lies Ahead—No. 8, p. 9 Follow a Road to Quality Management—No. 11, p. 33 Arizona Leads Surge in TPA Action—No. 4, p. 9 Put Some Muscle in Your Referral Relationships—No. 4, Bausch & Lomb to Reshape Teen Program—No. 9, p. 10 p. 34 British O.D.s Offer PRK to U.S. Myopes—No. 7, p. 10 Put Your Practice in a League of Its Own—No. 8, p. 31 California VDT Law Near Vote—No. 2, p. 12 Which Third—Party Plans are Worth Your While?—No. 2, Cataract Surgery Improves Life—No. 9, p. 8 p. 55 Ciba Vision, Mail Vendor Settle Suit—No. 3, p. 13 Work with Your Suppliers and They’ll Work for You— Clinton’s Plan Includes Optometry—No. 10, p. 7 No. 7, p. 29 Cold Winds Greet O.D.'s Call for Parity—No. 12, p. 6 Your Staff is Key to Practice Excellence—No. 12, p. 21 Corneal Disease May be ‘Crack Eye’—No. 11, p. 4 The Daily Disposable Arrives—No. 7, p. 9 OPTOMETRIC STUDY CENTER Device Aids Glaucoma Detection—No. 3, p. 9 The Laser Revolution: A Clinical Update—No. 7, p. 70 Experts Brainstorm on Leber’s—No. 5, p. 8 Pressure Situations: How to Manage POAG—No. 4, p. 75 Factors May Help Save Sight—No. 3, p. 10 Watch Out for these Malpractice Traps—No. 1, p. 66 FDA Gives OK to Iopidine 0.5% Solution—No. 12, p. 4 When Parasites Reside in the Eye—No. 10, p. 61 FDA to Set Sunglass Standards—No. 10, p. 8 Georgia O.D.s Keep TPA Rights—No. 2, p. 12 PATIENT CARE FEATURES Glaucoma Gene Mapped by Researchers—No. 8, p. 10 An Atlas of Glaucomatous Disc and Field Changes—No. Groups Ask FTC to Look at Lens Policy—No. 1, p. 9 8, p. 77 HCFA Holding Medicare Money Longer—No. 1, p. 9 Can Eating Right Preserve Your Sight?—No. 7, p. 65 HCFA Launches Discount Cataract Pilot—No. 6, p. 10 A Clinical Guide to Lacrimal Plumbing—No. 9, p. 75 HCFA Seeks Code for Topography—No. 7, p. 9 Connect and Communicate for Glaucoma Compliance— Health Care, Dues Increase Top Congress—No. 7, p. 7 No. 10, p. 42 Health Care Reform Leads AOA Congress—No. 5, p. 7 Get the Full Picture of the Corneal Landscape—No. 5, p. ICG Gives Better Picture of Choroid—No. 5, p. 10 65 Is VSP Ready for Frames Business?—No. 5, p. 10 How to Identify Retinal Vessel Occlusions—No. 11, p. 53 Minnesota, South Carolina Pass TPA Laws—No. 6, p. 9 How to Restore the Gift of Reading—No. 5, p. 55 Misuse of Cataract Guideline—No. 11, p. 6 Know All the Angles When IOP Spikes—No. 11, p. 65 NBEO Expands with Patient Care Exam—No. 12, p. 8 Take a Closer Look at Ocular Surface Disease—No. 9, p. New Diabetes Test to Involve O.D.s—No. 8, p. 14 71 New Laser a Breakthrough for PRK—No. 3, p. 10 Visual Hallucinations: Perception as Deception—No. 12, N.H. is 37th TPA State; 3 Bills Defeated—No. 8, p. 14 p. 30 NVA: Double Vision for Wal—Mart?—No. 2, p. 9 O.D.s Will Pay for Employees Health Care—No. 11, p. 4 PHARMACOLOGY Oklahoma O.D.s Keep Laser Rights—No. 5, p. 8 Botulinum Toxin: An Effective Weapon against Lid REVIEW OF OPTOMETRY DECEMBERI993 O)) ANNUAL INDEX Spasm—No. 7, p. 83 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT / Medicare, Third The Cat, the Girl and Her Eye—No. 4, p. 95 Party } Chronic Dry Eye Triggers Acute Corneal Discomfort—No. Changes in Medicare Mean Changes in Your Routine— 8, p. 95 No. 3, p. 45 Cosmetics and the Threat to the Eye—No. 2, p. 89 Have You Avoided These Medicare Problems?—No. 3, p. Glaucomatocyclitic Crisis: Elevated IOP Due to Trabeculi- 51 tis—No. 6, p. 93 Help Patients Get What They’re Entitled to—No. 2, p. 46 Maculopathy Secondary to Tamoxifen Use—No. 12, p. 43 Which Third—Party Plans are Worth It?—-No. 2, p. 55 The New Thinking of the Treatment of Optic Neuritis— No. 10, p. 77 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT /Patient Relations Numbers Game: How to Manage Chemical Burns—No. 3, Consultant’s Corner: p. 97 Delinquent Accounts are Valued Patients—No. 1, p. 27 Pseudotumor Cerebri Triggers Recurrent Occipital Keep an Eye on Patient Relations—No. 12, p. 19 Headaches—No. 9, p. 87 Patients Only a Mother Could Love—No. 8, p. 27 Taking on Pterygia: Ways to Limit the Lesion—No. 1, p. 89 What’s on Their Minds When They Won’t Comply—No. Unusually Severe Conjunctivitis Calls for Lab Testing— 8, p. 49 No. 11, p. 81 An Update on the Management of Carotid Stenosis—No. PRACTICE MANAGEMENT/Personnel 5, p. 125 Consultant’s Corner: Don’t Let Vacations Leave You Empty—No. 4, p. 31 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT/General What Do You Do with the New Guy?—No. 5, p. 29 Consultant's Corner: Work Out the Hastle of Working Late—No. 10, p. 27 Are There Enough Hours in Your Day?—No. 6, p. 27 More Phone Lines Mean Less Waiting—No. 2, p. 27 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT/Taxes, Finance Make Your New Look Solve Your Old Problems—No. 7, Consultant’s Corner: p. 37 Match an Adviser to Your Practice—No. 11, p. 31 Scale New Heights with Low Vision—No. 5, p. 51 A Private Look at Your Tax Dilemma—No. 7, p. 25 If the ‘M’ Word Darkens Your Practice—No. 5, p. 43 Planning to Live with the New Tax Law—No. 10, p. 12 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT /Computers ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSIONS Get On-line with the Best and Brightest—No. 9, p. 61 Considering Corticosteroids: Insights on Indications—No. The Paper—Free Office Can be Problem—Free, Too—No. 9, 2, p. 63 p. 53 Seek and Destroy Contact Lens Wear Complications—No. Ways to Connect with Patients and Doctors—No. 7, p. 45 3, p. 69 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT /Contact Lenses SYMPTOMATOLOGY The Astigmatic Alternative: A Hard and Soft Approach— Clinical Concerns in Diagnosing Diplopia—No. 8, p. 56 No. 9, p. 35 Finding the Facts Behind Flashes and Floaters—No. 6, p. Why the Time is Prime for RGP Bifocal Fits—No. 2, p. 39 TS How to Develop a Feel for Fields—No. 4, p. 67 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT/ Dispensing How to Recognize the Cause of Red Eyes—No. 3, p. 75 Allure of Add—Ons: Patient Pleasing Profits—No. 1, p. 31 How to Tell Why There’s Pain in the Eye—No. 2, p. 73 Consultant’s Corner: Probing the Problem Behind Blurred Vision—No. |, p. 56 Don’t Turn a Blind Eye to Sunglass Sales—No. 9, p. 25 A Premium Lens at a Lower Premium—No. 3, p. 33 VISUAL FIELDS Don’t Lose Your Edge with an On-Site Lab—No. 9, p. 45 Classic but Atypical: Patient Has Textbook Glaucomatous Get Your Staff Up to Speed on Progressive Lenses—No. 2, Fields—No. 12, p. 45 p. 31 Fields Suggest Leber's but Elevated [OPs Confound Diag- High Index: Not Just for High Myopes Anymore—No. 3, nosis—No. 5, p. 91 p. 61 Optic Disc Hypoplasia is 'Hidden' Source of bilateral Field Polycarbonate Protects You and Your Young Patients— Loss—No. 10, p. 79 No. 8, p. 41 Pits and Perimetry: Field Changes of an Atypical Case— The Truth About Aspheric Lenses—No. 6, p. 55 No. 4, p. 93 Toxoplasmosis: Small Scar, Big Field Defect—No. 8, p. 97 PRACTICE MANAGEMENT /iInstruments Care for Your Instruments and They’Il Care for You—No. 6, p. 41 Getting Set Up for Nursing Home Care—No. 11, p. 41 Video Technology Premieres in the Exam Room—No. 8, p. 65 When Your Practice Screams for an Extra Exam Room— No. 3, p. 115 Abel, Robert Jr.—No. 7, p. 65 REVIEW OF OPTOMETRY DECEMBER 1993 Bacigalupi, Michael—No. 3, p. 89 Sowka, Joseph W.—No. 4, p. 61, No. 11, p. 53 Baker, Cindy J.—No. 3, p. 92 Talley, David K.—No. 11, p. 65 Bass, Sherry J.—No. 4, p. 93, No. 6, p. 91, No. &, p. 97, Thomas, Randall K.—No. 4, p. 42 No. 10, p. 61 Walters, James—No. 3, p. 89 Braudway, Sonya—No. 3, p. 86 White, George E.—No. 1, p. 56, No. 1, p. 99. No. 2, p. 73, Bumgarner, L. Kennedy—No. 8, p. 77 No. 2, p. 97, No. 3, p. 75, No. 3, p. 105, No. 4, p. 67, No. 4, Carman—Merrifield, Carolyn R.—No. 5, p. 51 p. 105, No. 5, p. 130, No. 6, p. 103, No. 7, p. 91, No. 8, p. Ciccarelli, James—No. 11, p. 76 102, No. 9, p. 93, No. 10, p. 87, No. 11, p. 87, No. 12, p. 52 Cox, Steven K.—No. 3, p. 82 Wilson, Perry—No. 9, p. 53 DePaolis, Michael D.—No. 5, p. 65 Yeager, Kenneth A.—No. 11, p. 65 Egan, Rosemary—No. 9, p. 79 Everett, Steve—No. 1, p. 27, No. 2, p. 27, No. 3, p. 33, No. 3, p. 45, No. 3, p. 51, No. 4, p. 31, No. 5, p. 29, No. 6, p. 27, No. 7, p. 25, No. 8, p. 27, No. 9, p. 25, No. 10, p. 27, YOU MAKE THE CALL No. I1, p. 31, No. 12, p. 19 Forrest, Paul T.—No. 4, p. 75, No. 8, p. 56 Gailmard, Neil B.—No. 3, p. 33, No. 3, p. 115, No. 6, p. 27, No. 9, p. 25, No. 12, p. 19 DECEMBER 1992 Garbus, Carl—No. 8, p. 87 The patient has Sturge Weber syndrome. This is one of Garfield, John—No. 12, p. 39 Garston, Matthew—No. 4, p. 49 the phakomatoses diseases, multisystem disorders with sys- Gurwood, Andrew S.—No. 6, p. 75, No. 9, p. 79 temic as well as ocular complications. Many patients with Henahan, John L.—No. 7, p. 70 Sturge Weber syndrome exhibit central nervous system Holdeman, Nicky R.—No. 1, p. 66, No. 9, p. 83 problems. Klasman, Scott—No. 12, p. 39 This patient has glaucoma, with elevated intraocular Kairys, David—No. 5, p. 115, No. 10, p. 75 Kassalow, Jordan—No. 10, p. 53 pressure in the left eye and a cup—to—disc ratio of 0.6 x 0.6. Kassalow, Ted—No. 10, p. 53 Tonometry at different times of the day showed raised Lee, Stacy—-No. 9, p. 79 pressure in the right eye as well; the cup—to—disc ratio in Lewis, Stephen W.—No. 6, p. 87 that eye was 0.1 x 0.1. Maino, Dominick M.—No. 1, p. 25, No. 3, p. 31, No. 5, p. Visual field testing revealed mild paranasal scotomas in 27, No. 7, p. 23, No. 9, p. 27, No. 9, p. 61, No. 11, p. 25 Manero, Robert M.—No. 10, p. 12 the left eye. Gonioscopy disclosed normal angles. Marren, Susan E.—No. 10, p. 42 The patient was treated with .5 percent optipranolol, one Melton, N. Ron—No. 4, p. 42 drop in each eye every 12 hours. The patient was asked to McGlone, Vince—No. 10, p. 53 return in one week, at which point the pressures were Miles, Linda L.—No. 2, p. 27, No. 5, p. 29, No. 8, p. 27, 15mm Hg in the right eye, 20mm Hg in the left. Four No. 10, p. 27 Miller, Pamela J.—No. 5, p. 43 weeks later, the pressures were 15mm Hg in the right eye, Mordukowitz, Steven—No. 2, p. 83 17mm Hg in the left. Musick, John E.—No. 5, p 55 The patient and her family were educated about the dis- Onofrey, Bruce—No. 1, p. 89, No. 2, p. 89, No. 3, p. 97, ease, with emphasis on its genetic patterns and the impor- No. 4, p. 53, No. 4, p. 95, No. 5, p. 125, No. 6, p. 93, No. 7, tance of close follow—up management. p. 83, No. 8, p. 95, No. 9, p. 87, No. 10, p. 77, No. 11, p. 81, No. 12, p. 43 Pagani, Jean Marie—No. 9, p. 79 JANUARY 1993 Pass, Anastas—No. 3, p. 82, No. 3, p. 86 The patient has non—arteritic anterior ischemic optic Radiou, Michael C.—No. 5, p. 116 neuropathy and pre—proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Rudman, Robert—No. 8, p. 91 Careful evaluation of the optic nerve revealed Ryan, Robert A.—No. 5, p. 65 Sacco, Andrew J.—No. 7, p. 80 flame—shaped hemorrhages extending off the temporal side Sachs, Laura—No. 1, p. 27, No. 4, p. 31, No. 7, p. 25, No. of the disc. The disc margins were elevated. The region in 11, p. 31 and around the macula showed multiple dot— and Scheid, Terry—No. 11, p. 76 blot-shaped hemorrhages and some exudates. Blood pres- Schwartz, Carol—No. 2, p. 39, No. 6, p. 45, No. 7, p. 53, sure was elevated to 176/112. No. 8, p. 49, No. 9, p. 71 Sepich, Tracy Carpenter—No. 4, p. 87 Due to the disc edema, the patient was referred for Sharp, Richard P.—No. 3, p. 82 neuro—ophthalmologic evaluation. She was also referred to Sherman, Jerome—No. 4, p. 93, No. 6, p. 91, No. 8, p. 9, an endocrinologist for her diabetes, and a retinal consult No. 10, p. 79, No. 12, p. 45 and angiogram when her blood pressure stabilized. Lab Skorin, Leonid—No. 9, p. 75, No. 12, p. 30 analysis including complete blood count and fasting blood Smith, Dennis L.—No. 3, p. 92 REVIEW OF OPTOMETRY DECEMBER 1993

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