SIGNS IN FUNDUS OCULI AND ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION - UNCONVENTIONAL ASSESSMENT AND SIGNIFICANCE
- 1 January 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 36 (2), 231-+
Abstract
Signs in the fundus oculi, long regarded as prognostic in hypertensive disease, have been shown to be subject to gross observer error and bias when assessed in conventional ways. The authors describe unconventional ways of assessing diminution of vascularity in a population sample of men aged 50 and also in a group of hospital patients. They show that a method simple enough to be learned by a schoolboy in 20 min. gives information that is more precise and less biased than data obtained by more conventional means. Standards can be prepared and the information is quantitative. The unconventional data are closely related to the level of hypertension. Some anomalies in the data, possible ways of improving them and ways of testing their relation to prognosis are discussed.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Normal retinal vascular pattern. Arteriovenous ratio as a measure of arterial calibre.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1966
- A General Health‐examination of a Random Sample of 50‐year‐old Men in GÖteborgActa Medica Scandinavica, 1965
- A method of grading and recording; the retinal changes in essential hypertension.1958
- THE EYE IN GENERAL VASCULAR DISEASE HYPERTENSION AND ARTERIOSCLEROSISBritish Journal of Ophthalmology, 1957