Purpose: To determine the safety, efficacy, and quality of life improvement following sutureless 25-gauge pars plana vitrectomy for symptomatic floaters.
Methods: Patients with symptomatic vitreous floaters who underwent sutureless vitrectomy between January 2008 and January 2011 were included. Data were collected regarding baseline preoperative characteristics, postoperative outcomes, complications, and a nine-item quality-of-life survey completed by each patient.
Results: One hundred and sixty-eight eyes (143 patients) underwent sutureless 25-gauge pars plana vitrectomy for symptomatic vitreous floaters. Mean Snellen visual acuity was 20/40 preoperatively and improved to 20/25 postoperatively (P < 0.0001). Iatrogenic retinal breaks occurred in 12 of 168 eyes (7.1%). Intraoperative posterior vitreous detachment induction was not found to increase the risk of retinal breaks (P = 1.000). Postoperative complications occurred in three eyes, of which one had transient cystoid macular edema and two had transient vitreous hemorrhage. Approximately 88.8% of patients completed a quality-of-life survey, which revealed that 96% were "satisfied" with the results of the operation, and 94% rated the experience as a "complete success."
Conclusion: Sutureless 25-gauge pars plana vitrectomy for symptomatic vitreous floaters improved visual acuity, resulted in a high patient satisfaction quality-of-life survey, and had a low rate of postoperative complications. Sutureless pars plana vitrectomy should be considered as a viable means of managing patients with symptomatic vitreous floaters.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/IAE.0000000000000063 | DOI Listing |
J Vitreoretin Dis
January 2025
Texas Retina Center, Houston, TX, USA.
To evaluate whether infrared video imaging can supplement traditional examination and imaging methods to identify and quantify symptomatic vitreous opacities. A prospective nonrandomized nonmasked series was performed that included eyes of consecutive patients with a primary complaint of symptomatic vitreous opacities. A macular vitreous opacity score (0-4) was developed to grade the size of the opacities in relation to the macula after refixation of up, down, left, and right saccades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRetina
December 2024
The Retina Clinic London, 140 Harley Street, London W1G 7LB, United Kingdom.
Purpose: Propose new terminology and evaluate the effectiveness of Therapeutic Refractive Vitrectomy (TRV) for selective removal of vitreous floaters and opacities (VFO) utilizing Standardized Kinetic Anatomical Functional Testing of VFO (SK VFO Test) and new ultra widefield (UWF) OCT imaging techniques.
Methods: Retrospective analysis. Twenty eyes underwent TRV for symptomatic VFO.
J Clin Med
October 2024
Department of Ophthalmology, School of Medicine, University of Padova, 35121 Padova, Italy.
To assess the mismatch between the clinical observation of vitreous alterations and self-reported symptoms in young patients complaining of symptomatic vitreous opacities (SVO). The ophthalmic medical records of young patients presenting primarily with SVO were retrospectively evaluated. Symptoms severity was assessed using a questionnaire.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Retina Vitreous
October 2024
Department of Ophthalmology, Rambam Health Care Campus, P.O.B 9602, Haifa, 31096, Israel.
Purpose: To present a novel optical model explaining why the vast majority of patients with Asteroid Hyalosis (AH) do not perceive any floaters. This changes our understanding of floater perception and undermines the operation mode of YAG laser vitreolysis.
Methods: Relying on a previously published model of floater perception based on astronomical equations of a solar eclipse, and on ultrasound images of the vitreous in three eyes with AH, we explain why such patients do not perceive floaters in spite of opaque bodies filling their entire vitreous, to the point of, in severe cases of AH, obscuring the fundus view during ophthalmoscopy.
J Vitreoretin Dis
July 2024
Harvard Retinal Imaging Lab, Boston, MA, USA.
To investigate whether there is visual function impairment in patients with posterior vitreous detachment (PVD) using the active-learning quantitative contrast sensitivity function test. In this cross-sectional study, contrast sensitivity was measured in eyes with PVD and eyes without PVD using the quantitative contrast sensitivity function algorithm on the Adaptive Sensory Technology platform. Outcomes included the area under the log contrast sensitivity function curve, contrast acuity, and contrast sensitivity thresholds at 1 to 18 cycles per degree (cpd).
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