The efficacy of a new nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent, suprofen, for reducing pupillary constriction during cataract surgery was ascertained in a double-masked, multicenter, clinical study. Prior to surgery 1.0% suprofen or a placebo was instilled; the surgeon's normal regimen of mydriatics and cycloplegics was used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe treated an opacified membrane on the anterior surfaces of the posterior capsule of two cynomolgus monkeys that had undergone extracapsular cataract extraction and intraocular lens insertion. After development of opacification of the posterior capsule, argon laser energy was employed in an attempt to debride the capsules while maintaining structural integrity of the capsule. With this technique, small areas of destruction of the membrane on the anterior surface of the posterior capsule were created with preservation of the capsule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans Ophthalmol Soc U K (1962)
November 1985
A retrospective chart review of 2,514 consecutive posterior chamber implants was carried out to assess the management of the posterior capsule when vision loss dictated intervention. The capsulotomy technique used between May 1977 and March 1983 was pars plana posterior capsulotomy (227 eyes). All posterior capsulotomies performed after April 1, 1983 were with the YAG laser (342 eyes).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCystoid macular edema after cataract surgery, with or without intraocular lens implantation, has been reported to develop in more than 50% of patients as detected by fluorescein angiography. It is associated with reduced visual acuity in up to 8% of cases. Analysis of ongoing clinical trials at the Wilmer Institute indicates that clinically significant cystoid macular edema develops in a lower percentage of cases (2% total incidence and 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA wick, fashioned from a Mentor Merocel instrument wipe, serves as a simple and effective means for drainage of irrigation fluids during intraocular surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntraocular lens (IOL) implantation is now accepted as the most effective means of aphakic correction in selected patients undergoing cataract surgery. In terms of final rehabilitation, however, complications such as corneal oedema, retinal detachment, and cystoid macular oedema remain problematic. Results of prospective concurrent trials of IOL implantation performed at the Wilmer Institute are presented, with particular reference to the posterior chamber intraocular lens and with specific emphasis on postoperative complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe used the neodymium-YAG laser to perform discission of the posterior capsule in 49 eyes of 47 patients who had undergone previous extracapsular cataract extraction. The visual results were encouraging, with an improvement in visual acuity of one or more Snellen lines in 45 eyes and an improvement of three or more Snellen lines in 33 eyes. The complications included increases in intraocular pressure in 28 eyes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA patient with sickle cell disease had acute monocular visual loss with no visible vitreal or retinal abnormalities. A large aneurysm of the anterior communicating cerebral artery was found, with direct compression of the optic nerve. This represents a very rare presentation of a relatively common lesion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInstruments designed for pars plana vitrectomy can be used to manage selected complicated congenital cataracts such as those with persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous (PHPV). We have applied closed-eye vitrectomy techniques through a limbal approach in seven eyes with PHPV. A clear pupillary space was achieved in all cases and two of the seven eyes achieved useful vision.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInstruments designed for pars plana vitrectomy can be used to manage selected complicated congenital cataracts such as those with persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous (PHPV). We have applied closed-eye vitrectomy techniques through a limbal approach in seven eyes with PHPV. A clear pupillary space was achieved in all cases and two eyes achieved useful postoperative vision.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNine hundred and thirty-eight consecutive primary intraocular lens (IOL) implant cases performed at The Wilmer Institute during the past six years by two surgeons were reviewed. Progressive corneal endothelial cell loss and an increased rate of late-onset corneal oedema were detected in the group with the Morcher (European) four-loop iris-clip Binkhorst IOLs. A higher rate of clinically-significant cystoid macular oedema developed in eyes with the American-manufactured four-loop Binkhorst lens, presumably from chronic iritis caused by contaminants on the IOLs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans Ophthalmol Soc U K (1962)
September 1983
Loss of transparency in the human lens can be documented by a variety of methods including: (a) slit lamp photography with or without corrections for depth of focus; (b) retroillumination photography alone or coupled to densitometry; (c) high resolution targets projected into the eye and visualized by an ophthalmoscope; (d) drawings and/or measurements of lens opacities; (e) visual acuity determinations after visualization of the macular area and complete eye examination. The advantages and practical uses of each method were reviewed with reference to its value in determining the progression of cataracts in humans. Diabetes accelerates cataract development as determined from graphic plots of cataracts classified after surgical extraction vs the patient's age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome, a "tyrosinase positive' form of oculocutaneous albinism, is a triad comprising albinism, a hemorrhagic diathesis and ceroid-lipofuscin storage. A pedigree is presented showing consanguinity with a pattern of pseudodominance. Electroretinography in two isolated Hermansky-Pudlak subjects was distinctly abnormal, showing decreased rod and cone responses (as well as abnormal flicker fusion responses) in one patient, and reduced photopic and scotopic responses in another.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 58-year-old white woman with known metastatic glucagonoma had widespread necrolytic migratory erythema characteristic of the glucagonoma syndrome. She did not respond to conventional chemotherapy with streptozocin. After one course of dacarbazine therapy, she had remission of the glucagonoma clinically with regression of tumor metastases as defined by liver scanning.
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