Applied Sciences (Jun 2022)

Use of Artificial Neural Networks to Predict the Progression of Glaucoma in Patients with Sleep Apnea

  • Nicoleta Anton,
  • Catalin Lisa,
  • Bogdan Doroftei,
  • Silvia Curteanu,
  • Camelia Margareta Bogdanici,
  • Dorin Chiselita,
  • Daniel Constantin Branisteanu,
  • Ionela Nechita-Dumitriu,
  • Ovidiu-Dumitru Ilie,
  • Roxana Elena Ciuntu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app12126061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. 6061

Abstract

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Aim: To construct neural models to predict the progression of glaucoma in patients with sleep apnea. Materials and Methods: Modeling the use of neural networks was performed using the Neurosolutions commercial simulator. The built databases gather information on a group of patients with primitive open-angle glaucoma and normal-tension glaucoma, who have been associated with sleep apnea syndrome and various stages of disease severity. The data within the database were divided as follows: 65 were used in the neural network training stage and 8 were kept for the validation stage. In total, 21 parameters were selected as input parameters for neural models including: age of patients, BMI (body mass index), systolic and diastolic blood pressure, intraocular pressure, central corneal thickness, corneal biomechanical parameters (IOPcc, HC, CRF), AHI, desaturation index, nocturnal oxygen saturation, remaining AHI, type of apnea, and associated general conditions (diabetes, hypertension, obesity, COPD). The selected output parameters are: c/d ratio, modified visual field parameters (MD, PSD), ganglion cell layer thickness. Forward-propagation neural networks (multilayer perceptron) were constructed with a layer of hidden neurons. The constructed neural models generated the output values for these data. The obtained results were then compared with the experimental values. Results: The best results were obtained during the training stage with the ANN network (21:35:4). If we consider a 25% confidence interval, we find that very good results are obtained during the validation stage, except for the average GCL thickness, for which the errors are slightly higher. Conclusions: Excellent results were obtained during the validation stage, which support the results obtained in other studies in the literature that strengthen the connection between sleep apnea syndrome and glaucoma changes.

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