Prcis: Primary angle closure and primary angle closure glaucoma may exhibit normal intraocular pressure. Twenty-four-hour intraocular pressure fluctuation is highest in primary angle closure glaucoma. The degree of peripheral anterior synechiae was associated with a 24-hour intraocular pressure pattern in primary angle-closure disease without laser iridotomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBack Ground/aims: To determine whether parapapillary choroidal microvasculature (PPCMv) density, measured by optical coherence tomography angiography, differed between acute primary angle-closure (APAC), primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and controls.
Methods: This is a prospective, cross-sectional, observational study. Data from 149 eyes from two academic referral centres were analysed.
Background: Here, we describe a patient who exhibited pseudophakic angle closure due to vitreous block following ureteroscopic lithotripsy under general anesthesia.
Case Presentation: A 57-year-old Thai man presented with sudden eye pain and blurring of vision in the left eye following ureteroscopic lithotripsy under general anesthesia. The patient had a history of coconut hit into his left eye which resulted in traumatic anterior lens subluxation, for which he had undergone phacoemulsification and scleral-fixated intraocular lens implantation in the left eye.
Purpose: To compare peripapillary perfused capillary density (PCD) on optical coherence tomography angiography among resolved acute angle-closure (AAC), primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), and control eyes.
Design: Prospective, cross-sectional, observational study.
Methods: All patients with resolved AAC or POAG of varying severity and controls were enrolled.
Purpose: To compare peripapillary perfused capillary density (PCD) among eyes with true exfoliation syndrome (TEX), eyes with pseudoexfoliation syndrome (PEX), and healthy control eyes.
Materials And Methods: In this observational cross-sectional study, eyes with and without TEX or PEX were assessed by optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) imaging. Bilateral OCTA images (4.