Purpose: The authors performed a series of experiments designed to determine if early effects of YAG laser cycloablation could be detected by ultrasound biomicroscopy in postmortem eyes and living patients. They also designed an apparatus that allowed simultaneous ultrasound biomicroscopic imaging of YAG laser cycloablation.
Methods: Treated and untreated regions of postmortem eyes treated with YAG cycloablation were imaged and compared. Treatment was placed at varying distances from the limbus in postmortem eyes and the resulting effects imaged. Histologic examinations were performed after imaging. Six living patients had ultrasound biomicroscopy before and after YAG cycloablation. An apparatus combining contact YAG laser and ultrasound biomicroscopy was used in postmortem eyes.
Results: Early treatment effects imaged included ciliary epithelial disruption, ciliary epithelial separation, and bubble formation. Ultrasound biomicroscopic findings varied with the distance of treatment from the limbus and were maximal below the treatment site. Results of histologic examination showed close correlation to the ultrasound biomicroscopic images. Similar findings to those found in postmortem eyes were found in living patients after treatment. The apparatus combining contact YAG and ultrasound biomicroscopy allowed realtime imaging of effects of YAG laser cycloablation.
Conclusions: The ability of ultrasound biomicroscopy to detect changes associated with cyclodestructive procedures potentially could provide us with a method of improving treatment precision and correlating treatment effect with clinical response.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0161-6420(95)31020-2 | DOI Listing |
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