M
Mehrdad Malihi
Researcher at Mayo Clinic
Publications - 9
Citations - 386
Mehrdad Malihi is an academic researcher from Mayo Clinic. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intraocular pressure & Trabectome. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 345 citations. Previous affiliations of Mehrdad Malihi include University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Head and Body Position on Intraocular Pressure
Mehrdad Malihi,Arthur J. Sit +1 more
TL;DR: In normal subjects, IOP is lowest when measured while sitting with the neck in the neutral position, and all other head and body positions result in an elevation of IOP compared with the position used for typical clinical measurements.
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Clinical results of ab interno trabeculotomy using the trabectome for open-angle glaucoma: the Mayo Clinic series in Rochester, Minnesota.
TL;DR: For criteria involving IOP ≤18 mm Hg, the 24-month survival of ab interno trabeculotomy is low and this surgery is appropriate for patients requiring a target IOP of 21mm Hg or above.
Journal ArticleDOI
Circadian variation of aqueous humor dynamics in older healthy adults
TL;DR: The nocturnal decrease in aqueous humor flow rate in older, healthy subjects is compensated by a small decrease in outflow facility and a large decrease in uveoscleral outflow to maintain a stable IOP at night.
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A novel method for computerized measurement of episcleral venous pressure in humans.
TL;DR: This new method provides a precise means to assess EVP based on specific endpoints of vessel collapse, and enables, for the first time, objective and non-invasive measurements of EVP changes.
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Delayed-onset symptomatic hyphema after ab interno trabeculotomy surgery.
TL;DR: Patients with symptomatic delayed-onset symptomatic hyphema after Trabectome surgery in the absence of further surgeries or trauma are described, likely mechanisms are exertion-related increase in episcleral venous pressure or ocular compression from sleeping on the surgical side, followed by sudden decompression and blood reflux.