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Nimesh B. Patel

Researcher at University of Houston

Publications -  66
Citations -  1210

Nimesh B. Patel is an academic researcher from University of Houston. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 52 publications receiving 861 citations. Previous affiliations of Nimesh B. Patel include Tufts University & Bascom Palmer Eye Institute.

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Persistent Asymmetric Optic Disc Swelling After Long-Duration Space Flight: Implications for Pathogenesis.

TL;DR: The persistent asymmetric findings suggested, coupled with the lumbar puncture opening pressures, suggest that prolonged microgravity exposure may have produced asymmetric pressure changes within the perioptic subarachnoid space.
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Age-Associated Changes in the Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer and Optic Nerve Head

TL;DR: Although both RNFL and ONH NRR parameters contain axons of retinal ganglion cells, there are differences in age-related changes in these measures that should be considered in clinical application.
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Reproducibility of measuring lamina cribrosa pore geometry in human and nonhuman primates with in vivo adaptive optics imaging.

TL;DR: The small intersession variability in normal pore geometry suggests that AOSLO imaging could be used to measure and track changes in laminar pores in vivo during glaucomatous progression.
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Optic Disc Edema and Choroidal Engorgement in Astronauts During Spaceflight and Individuals Exposed to Bed Rest.

TL;DR: It is suggested that strict head-down tilt bed rest produces a different magnitude of edema than occurs after a similar duration of spaceflight, and no change in choroid thickness.
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Agreement between Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Measures from Spectralis and Cirrus Spectral Domain OCT

TL;DR: Investigation of the influence of scan centration, ocular magnification, and segmentation on the degree of agreement of RNFL thickness measures by two SD OCT instruments found sources of disagreement in RNFL measures between SD-OCT instruments can be attributed to the location of the scan path and differences in their retinal layer segmentation algorithms.