Purpose: To explore the course of a pseudophakic and pseudoiridic 61-year-old man with a history of open angle glaucoma in his right eye who developed a sub-totally secluded pupil then later presented with angle closure, a significant pressure spike, and a marked myopic refractive shift, consistent with aqueous misdirection.
Observations: Goniosynechialysis, surgical removal of much of the native peripheral iris, and zonulohyaloidectomy led to a return to his prior refraction and improve intraocular pressure (IOP) control.
Conclusions And Importance: This case demonstrates that a diagnosis of aqueous misdirection should not be disregarded in the presence of a prior vitrectomy and that aqueous misdirection should be strongly considered in cases of elevated IOP with a patent peripheral iridotomy, myopic shift and angle narrowing.
Prcis: Rates of ocular surface failure and glaucoma reoperation were similar between cyclophotocoagulation (CPC) and glaucoma drainage devices (GDDs). CPC is a safe option in the management of secondary glaucoma after ocular surface stem cell transplantation (OSST).
Purpose: To assess surgical and ocular surface outcomes in patients requiring glaucoma surgery after OSST.
Purpose: Pseudoexfoliation (PEX) syndrome is an age-related systemic disease with ocular manifestations. The development of animal models is critical in order to elucidate the cause of the disease and to test potential treatment regimens. The purpose of this study is to report phenotypes found in mouse eyes injected with Adenovirus coding Wnt5a.
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