Purpose: Describe the clinical finding and course of treatment in patients with a sudden decrease in visual function due to an acute occlusion of the arteria centralis retinae. Patients were primarily indicated for selective angiography with thrombolysis of the ophthalmic artery.

Materials And Methods: Medical documentation of two patients with acute central retinal artery occlusion with a time duration of up to 5 hours was evaluated retrospectively. The diagnosis of central retinal artery occlusion was determined on the basis of a detailed ophthalmological examination in arteficial mydriasis. The initial best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) were hand movement in front of the eye with uncertain light projection in first patient and no light perception in the second patient. In both cases a relative afferent pupillary defect of the 4th degree was present with the onset of the ischemic macular edema and an incipient development of the cherry red spot. After evaluation of the overall condition, laboratory findings, exclusion of cancer and surgery in the last three months, a selective angiography of ophthalmic artery and thrombolysis in collaboration with the intervention radiologist were performed.   Results: First patient with a better initial visual acuity, selective angiography demonstrated a decrease in flow in the central retinal artery with subsequent improvement in haemodynamic ratios after application of 12 ml of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (Alteplase). The BCVA improved to 1/ 60 after interventional procedure. We did not experience any serious treatment side effects during or after intervention. In the second patient, selective angiography of the intracranial arteries and internal carotids revealed the presence of an aneurysm before the ophthalmic artery. Due to the normal flow of the contralateral carotid and the filling of the intracranial vessels on the affected side via the circle of Willis, the internal carotid ligation was performed under the aneurysm. Three months after the surgery BCVA was no light perception and patient had no neurological symptomatology.

Conclusion: Selective angiography in combination with thrombolysis appears to be a useful imaging as well as therapeutic method for acute central retinal artery occlusion. This technique allows not only to confirm the diagnosis but it can also solve problem causally and improve the visual acuity of the affected person. Sometimes it also helps to clear the cause of the closure and prevent next potential embolization into the intracranial space and possible fatal consequences of CNS involvement or even death.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.31348/2019/3/6DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

selective angiography
24
central retinal
20
retinal artery
20
artery occlusion
16
visual acuity
12
acute central
8
light perception
8
second patient
8
three months
8
ophthalmic artery
8

Similar Publications

Coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) analysis can help in the planning of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Fractional flow reserve derived from coronary CTA (FFR), coronary CTA-derived regional myocardial mass, and FFR virtual PCI planner can facilitate decisions concerning sheath and guide catheter selection, stent lengths on the basis of predicted post-PCI FFR, optimal fluoroscopic angles, evaluation of provisional vs 2-stent bifurcation PCI techniques, and assessment of the magnitude of jeopardized myocardial mass in cases with side branch compromise. This case series illustrates the emerging opportunities for coronary CTA-based planning of bifurcation PCI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Current guidelines recommend transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) for patients with aortic stenosis and porcelain aorta (PA). Neurological outcomes of patients with PA undergoing TAVI with modern valves require clarification as most trials examined balloon-expandable valves (BEV) and self-expandable valves in intermediate or high-risk patients, but not specifically in patients with PA. Our aim was to compare outcomes, including stroke and mortality, in well-matched patients with and without PA who received BEV during transfemoral TAVI procedures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Infectious intracranial aneurysms (IIAs) are rare lesions with fragile arterial walls located within the aneurysms, carrying a high risk of rupture. Standard management often involves antibiotic therapy and parent artery occlusion; however, the latter carries a significant risk of cerebral infarction. This report presents a case of an unruptured IIA following cerebral infarction, successfully treated with coil embolization while preserving the parent artery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: To define optimal parameters for the evaluation of vessel visibility in intracranial stents (ICS) and flow diverters (FD) using photon-counting detector computed tomography angiography (PCD-CTA) with spectral reconstructions.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed consecutive patients with implanted ICS or FD, who received a PCD-CTA between April 2023 and March 2024. Polyenergetic, virtual monoenergetic, pure lumen, and iodine reconstructions with different keV levels (40, 60, and 80) and reconstruction kernels (body vascular [Bv]48, Bv56, Bv64, Bv72, and Bv76) were evaluated by two radiologists with regions of interests and Likert scales.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The aim of this study was to perform a comparative pre-clinical evaluation of a new fenestrated endovascular aneurysm repair dedicated stent using perfused 3D printed patient anatomies.

Methods: The test setup included a pulsatile pump set to reproduce human haemodynamics, four 3D printed pararenal aneurysms connected to a bench test, and four corresponding fenestrated grafts (Zenith Fenestrated; Cook, Bloomington, IN, USA). Bridging stents were sized based on analysis of patients computed tomography scans and included either four standard covered stents (BeGraft [BG]; Bentley, Hechingen, Germany) or four similar covered stent grafts mounted on a modified balloon to allow stent implantation and flaring in one step (BeFlared [BF]; Bentley).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!