流行流行病世界的眼科远程医疗:现在和未来的展望

Amit Biran, A. Loewenstein, D. Mezad-Koursh, Matias Iglicki, Dinah Zur
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19的限制增加了眼科对远程医疗的需求和使用,但这种方法需要远程数据收集和可靠的技术,以确保准确和安全的检查和诊断。本文综述了老年性黄斑变性(AMD)、糖尿病视网膜病变(DR)和儿科眼科的现有远程医疗技术,并探讨了其在COVID-19时代的适用性。我们对PubMed进行了文献检索,使用远程医疗关键词检索所有相关病理(AMD、DR和儿科眼科),以确定2001年至2021年间发表的英文文章。我们评估了现有的远程医疗技术是否能满足COVID-19限制下患者的需求。我们的研究结果表明,有可靠的现有家庭监测技术。然而,自主操作的家用光学相干断层扫描仍然是AMD监测的一项研究技术,尚未可用于常规使用。计算机算法旨在识别DR病理和/或研究中相关参数的恶化已经显示出极好的结果。在儿科眼科,家长可以对孩子的眼科参数进行基本测试;父母测试的改进将需要开发快速可靠的自动仪器。总而言之,目前的技术使非专业人员能够远程使用眼科检查,这对于大流行背景下的眼科护理提供特别相关。需要进一步的调查工作,以改进家庭监测和计算机化数据处理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ophthalmic Telemedicine in the Pandemic–Endemic World: Present and Future Perspectives
COVID-19 restrictions have increased the need and use of telemedicine in ophthalmology but this approach requires remote data collection and reliable technologies to ensure accurate and safe examination and diagnosis. This article reviews the existing telemedicine technologies for age-related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic retinopathy (DR) and paediatric ophthalmology, and discusses their applicability in the COVID-19 era. We conducted a literature search of PubMed using telemedicine keywords for all relevant pathologies (AMD, DR and paediatric ophthalmology) to identify English-language articles published between 2001 and 2021. We assessed whether existing telemedicine technologies would meet the needs of patients under COVID-19 restrictions. Our findings showed that there are reliable existing home-monitoring technologies. However, self-operated home optical coherence tomography is still an investigational technology for AMD monitoring and is not yet available for routine use. Computerized algorithms aimed at identifying DR pathology and or deterioration in relevant parameters under investigation have shown excellent results. In paediatric ophthalmology, parents can conduct basic testing of their child's ophthalmic parameters; improvements in parental testing will require the development of quick and reliable automatic instruments. In conclusion, current technologies lend themselves to remote use for ophthalmic examination by non-professional individuals, which is particularly relevant for ophthalmic care provision in the pandemic setting. Further investigative effort is needed in order to improve home monitoring and computerized data processing.
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