The purpose of this study was to report the association between visual impairment (VI) and self-reported visual difficulty among the elderly in residential care using the Indian Vision Functioning Questionnaire (IND-VFQ-33) psychometrically validated questionnaire. Participants aged ≥ 60 years were recruited from 41 homes in Hyderabad in South India. All participants underwent detailed eye examination and interviews. Self-reported visual function was assessed using the IND-VFQ-33 questionnaire. Factor Analysis and Item Response Theory (IRT) models were used for analysis. Multivariable regression models were used to investigate associations between derived global difficulty scores versus severity and causes of VI. Presenting visual acuity worse than 6/18 in the better eye was considered as VI. In total, 867 elderly participants completed the INDVFQ-33. Two latent traits ("daily activities" and "visual symptoms") were identified on factor analysis, each with uniquely loading questions. Participants with V resource allocation for developing early intervention programs for the elderly. The Caregiver's Congenital Glaucoma QoL (CarCGQoL) questionnaire was proposed as a measure of QoL of caregivers with children with primary congenital glaucoma (PCG). Support for its psychometric properties among other diagnostic groups is required for scores to be interpreted in the same manner across groups. Therefore we investigated the measurement properties and cross-diagnostic validity of the CarCGQoL questionnaire among caregivers of children with congenital cataract, retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), and blinding corneal disorders. Eight hundred ninety-one caregivers (mean age, 28.3 years; 76% mothers) of children with congenital cataract (n = 407), ROP (n = 272), and blinding corneal disorders (n = 212) completed the CarCGQoL questionnaire. Rasch analysis was used to investigate the psychometric properties. Unidimensionality (by principal components analysis of residuals, PCA) was examined for each group and for pooled sample. Differential item functioning (DIF) was investigated to explore whetherIF must be taken into account. When evaluating the impact of interventions on the caregiver's QoL using the CarCGQoL questionnaire in a pooled sample of pediatric ocular conditions, cross-diagnostic DIF must be taken into account. Variation in retinal thickness with eye size complicates efforts to estimate retinal ganglion cell number from optical coherence tomography (OCT) measures. We examined the relationship among axial length, the thickness and volume of the ganglion cell layer (GCL), and the size of the optic chiasm. We used OCT to measure GCL thickness over 50 degrees of the horizontal meridian in 50 healthy participants with a wide range of axial lengths. Using a model eye informed by individual biometry, we converted GCL thickness to tissue volume per square degree. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/Nutlin-3.html We also measured the volume of the optic chiasm for 40 participants using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). There is a positive relationship between GCL tissue volume and axial length. Given prior psychophysical results, we conclude that increased axial length is associated with increased retinal ganglion cell size, decreased cell packing, or both. We characterize how retinal ganglion cell tissue varies systematically in volume and spatial distribution as a function of axial length. This model allows us to remove the effect of axial length from individual difference measures of GCL volume. We find that variation in this adjusted GCL volume correlates well with the size of the optic chiasm. Our results provide the volume of ganglion cell tissue in the retina, adjusted for the presumed effects of axial length upon ganglion cell size and/or packing. The resulting volume measure accounts for individual differences in the size of the optic chiasm, supporting its use to characterize the post-retinal visual pathway. Variations in ametropia can confound clinical measures of retinal features. We present a framework within which the thickness and volume of retinal structures can be measured and corrected for the effects of axial length. Variations in ametropia can confound clinical measures of retinal features. We present a framework within which the thickness and volume of retinal structures can be measured and corrected for the effects of axial length. Diabetics are more prone to suffer from dry eye (DE). The ages of diabetes are decreasing, so ocular surface status in younger generations is worthy of attention. We used tandem mass tag (TMT)-labeled proteomics and weighted correlation network analysis (WGCNA) to identify differentially expressed proteins in the tear proteome of adults and children with diabetic DE. Study subjects were divided into six groups of 10, including three groups each for adults and children. The adult groups included diabetics with DE (A), diabetics without DE (B), and normal controls (C); the corresponding groups of children were identified as (D), (E), and (F). DE tests were performed on all subjects. We extracted total proteins and labeled them with TMTs for analysis. WGCNA was used to recognize hub genes. Tear film function was poorer in patients with diabetic DE. In adults, 1922 proteins were identified, and WGCNA analysis revealed three hub genes related to diabetic DE. For children, 2709 proteins were identified, and WGCNA analysis identified one hub gene related to diabetic DE. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes analysis found similarities among metabolic pathways involved in differential expression of proteins in adult and child tear samples. The pathogenesis of diabetic DE was highly similar in adults and children. The differentially expressed tear proteins in type 2 diabetes of adults and children was associated with inflammation, immune factors, and lipid metabolism. Our findings found high similarities in the pathogenesis of diabetic DE in adults and children. Our findings found high similarities in the pathogenesis of diabetic DE in adults and children. The purpose of this study was to evaluate experimentally the efficacy of femtosecond laser (FL)-assisted capsulotomy using an eye model with different degrees of zonular dehiscence (ZD). An eye model with ZD was created by removing the total iris and including the planned range of the ZD in porcine and human cadaver eyes. FL-assisted capsulotomies (laser group) and manual capsulotomies (manual group) were created for the eye model with 0, 45, 135, 180, and 270degrees of ZD. The continuity, mean diameter, ellipticity, and decentration of the capsulotomy were evaluated using the captured images. The same evaluation of FL-assisted capsulotomies was done for five human cadaver eyes with 180degrees of ZD. In the laser group, no differences were seen in the mean diameter, ellipticity, and decentration, although the manual group resulted in significantly larger, ovalized, and decentered capsulotomies with different degrees of ZD ( < 0.001, <0.001, and =0.0317, respectively). Continuous capsulotomies or capsulotomies with microadhesions were obtained up to 180degrees of ZD, and incomplete treatment areas were seen in eyes with 270degrees of ZD.