Visual Recovery in 2 Cases of Central Retinal Artery Occlusion Treated With Prompt Intra-ophthalmic Artery Fibrinolysis.

J Neuroophthalmol

Division of Ophthalmology (LD), Department of Surgery, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada ; and Department of Medical Imaging (PN), University Health Network, Department of Ophthalmology and Vision Sciences (EM), Faculty of Medicine, Division of Neurology (EM), Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.

Published: September 2023

Background: Central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) rapidly produces inner retinal ischemia and irreversible vision loss. Although many therapeutic interventions have been proposed, no interventions have proven effective in restoring vision in large randomized controlled trials and final visual outcome in most patients is very poor.

Methods: Retrospective case series.

Results: We describe 2 cases of CRAO occurring after uncomplicated cataract surgery under topical anesthesia and rapidly diagnosed. Both had very severe vision loss at presentation with dramatic improvement after intra-ophthalmic artery fibrinolysis administered 2.75 and 5.5 hours after symptom onset.

Conclusions: Sudden monocular vision loss is an ophthalmologic emergency as CRAO must be ruled out and if diagnosed, rapid intervention should be performed. Devastating vision loss can be prevented if interventional neuroradiology is trained and available on a 24-hour basis for administration of local intra-arterial thrombolysis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/WNO.0000000000001785DOI Listing

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