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Query: UMLS:C0086543 (cataract)
29,165 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 23 year old female, born in 1957, was diagnosed as having idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura at the age of 3 and treated with prednisolone during her childhood with no response. On her regular check-up in 1978, facial edema and proteinuria suggested renal disease. The family history was negative for bleeding diathesis or renal disease. Close examination revealed the following: WBC 4,200/microliters without leukocyte inclusions, RBC 3.42 x 10(6)/microliters, Hb 11.7 g/dl. PT 10.6 sec, APTT 28.9 sec. Platelet count 4,500/microliters by HEMATRAK 360, and 40 x 10(3)/microliters measured by microscopic method. Giant platelets were noted on peripheral blood smear with an average diameter of 6.1 microns. Bleeding time (Duke) was 12.0 min. Number of megakaryocytes was increased although platelet production was remarkably decreased. Results of platelet aggregation and retention tests were normal. Platelet life span (T1/2) was 2.3 days. Sensory neural hearing loss, congenital cataract, double ureter and short small intestine were also found. Chromosome analysis showed 46XX. She underwent splenectomy resulting in increase of the platelet count to 226 x 10(3)/microliters. The increased platelet count, however, gradually decreased to the initial count in 2 years although the bleeding tendency was improved. In 1987, renal function deteriorated, causing intractable hypertension. The serum creatinine was 4.8 mg/dl. The following year she developed cerebral bleeding and died 4 days after the episode. The serum creatinine was 8.6 mg/dl.
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PMID:[Macrothrombocytopenia with deafness, nephritis, cataract, short small intestine, and double ureter]. 221 83

The lenses of New Zealand White and Flemish Giant rabbits were removed using five techniques representative of the different clinical approaches to extracapsular cataract extraction currently employed. Posterior capsule opacification developed in all experimental animals within 6 weeks of the operation. None of the techniques reduced the incidence of the capsular opacification. Histological analyses including immunofluorescent and tritiated thymidine labelling were used to determine the nature of the cellular constitutents of the secondary membrane. The evidence indicates that the opacity is due not only to lens cells remaining after the operation but also consists of cells of nonlenticular origin. The data strongly implicate the anterior uvea as the source of those cells. Furthermore, the findings suggest that posterior capsule opacification is the product of a migration and a proliferation of both cell populations.
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PMID:Posterior capsule opacification: experimental analyses. 388 27

Vitrectomy techniques and the use of liquid silicone oil provide important new possibilities in the management of complex retinal detachments including (1) Rhegmatogeneous detachments complicated by vitreous haemorrhages, cataract or an inadequate pupillary opening (2) Traction retinal detachment (3) Combined rhegmatogeneous-traction detachment (4) Proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR) (5) Giant tears, especially when the posterior flap is folded over (6) Retinal detachments with posterior retinal breaks. The current concepts in the management of the above retinal detachments are discussed and the specific techniques employed are described.
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PMID:Current concepts in the management of complex retinal detachments. 658 64

Silicone oil was used in combination with vitrectomy to treat 127 cases of complicated retinal detachments. An initial anatomic success in 120 cases (94%) was reduced to 68 (54%) after an average follow-up of 32 months and was attributable to ongoing proliferative vitreo-retinopathy (PVR). The indications for the use of silicone oil were: 1. Retinal detachment complicated by PVR (107 cases), 20 of which required multiple operations. Anatomic success was achieved in 59 (55%) and of these 23 (40%) had a visual acuity of 6/60. 2. Giant retinal tears (GRT) (7 cases). Four (57%) of these remained attached, three (75%) having a final vision of 6/36. 3. GRTs complicated by PVR (8 cases). Four (50%) were anatomically successful and two had a final vision of 6/60. 4. Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (5 cases). Two (40%) remained attached and one of these (50%) had hand movements vision. The silicone oil was removed electively in 23 eyes, 16 (70%) of these being anatomically successful. Oil was removed in 43 eyes because of complications, and in 20 (46%) of these, the retina remained attached at the end of follow-up. Complications included cataract in all 14 phakic eyes; rubeosis in 19 eyes (15%); corneal opacification in 52 eyes (41%), there being no clear cut difference between those eyes with an inferior iridectomy (35 of 85 eyes--41%) and those without (12 of 29 eyes--41%); and raised intraocular pressure in 55 eyes (43%). We conclude that although far from being ideal, silicone oil appears to have played some part in achieving the successful results reported in this study.
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PMID:Silicone oil insertion. A review of 127 consecutive cases. 761 51

A prospective, single-surgeon study was performed on 59 patients randomized to receive a poly(methyl methacrylate) intraocular lens or a heparin-surface-modified lens after standardized endocapsular cataract surgery with a routine postoperative regimen. The anterior chamber laser flare and cell measurements and the cellular reaction on the anterior lens surface were monitored for a year following surgery. This report examines the correlations between the anterior chamber flare and cell reaction and the anterior IOL surface cellular reaction. The findings suggest that the early postoperative blood-aqueous barrier breakdown is primarily caused by surgical trauma; by one month the blood-aqueous barrier function is determined by inflammatory mediators released by small monocyte-derived cells on the IOL surface. Giant cells on the IOL surface did not correlate with aqueous flare, which suggests an insignificant capacity to release inflammatory mediators.
J Cataract Refract Surg 1995 May
PMID:Correlations between aqueous flare and cells and lens surface cytology in eyes with poly(methyl methacrylate) and heparin-surface-modified intraocular lenses. 767 72

Previous cytopathological studies have demonstrated the presence of cellular deposits on the poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) intraocular lens (IOL) surface. In this prospective study, IOL surface specular microscopy was used to document the natural history of these deposits in the first year following PMMA IOL implantation. Intraocular lens surface specular microscopy was performed 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after endocapsular cataract surgery in 27 otherwise normal eyes. Postoperatively, IOLs were assessed for the presence of inflammatory cells, with the number of cells graded from 0 (none) to 4 (many). Two inflammatory cell types were visualized: small and giant cells. Small cells were found on 81.5% of IOLs at 1 month, 73.1% at 3 months, and 30.4% at 12 months. Small cells were found in only small numbers (peak mean cell score of 1.26 +/- 0.94 at 1 month). Giant cells were found on 59.3% of lenses at 1 month, 73.1% at 3 months, and 39.1% at 12 months. The number of giant cells on each lens peaked at 3 months (mean cell score 2.0 +/- 1.55), when 50% of lenses achieved a giant cell score of 3 or 4. Inflammatory cell deposits are, therefore, a normal occurrence on the PMMA IOL surface for up to 1 year after surgery. This cellular response consists of two distinct processes: a small cell response, which peaks by 1 month, and a later giant cell response, which peaks at 3 months.
J Cataract Refract Surg 1995 Jul
PMID:Natural history of cellular deposits on the anterior intraocular lens surface. 852 96

We report the first familial cases with two different types of posterior fossa cystic malformation and a leukodystrophic-like aspect on cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The girl and her brother had severe encephalopathy, marked hypotonia, absent deep tendon reflexes, macrocrania, gigantism, and dysmorphic face and extremities. The girl had generalized seizures. The boy had unilateral cataract and bilateral optic atrophy. The parents were first cousins, suggesting autosomal recessive transmission. MRI showed Dandy-Walker variant in the girl, with cerebellar vermis hypoplasia and expansion of the cisterna magna, which communicated with the fourth ventricle. Her brother had mega cisterna magna communicating with the fourth ventricle and a normal cerebellum. The 2 children had abnormally high signal in the supratentorial white matter. Visual and auditory evoked potentials revealed prolonged latencies. Motor and sensory conduction velocities were normal. Muscle and nerve biopsies were normal. Metabolic exploration demonstrated no abnormality.
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PMID:Familial Dandy-Walker malformation and leukodystrophy. 925 68

Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome is a congenital syndrome with characteristic abnormalities: omphalocele, macroglossia, neonatal gigantism, visceromegaly, hemihypertrophy and a predisposition to embryonic tumors. Ophthalmologic abnormalities have not been described with Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome. The authors report one case of Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome associated with bilateral congenital cataract. Family studies indicate linkage of the Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome locus to the marker 11p15,5. The genetics of cataract is heterogenic. Several mutations responsible for congenital cataract have been described. The association of the Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome and cataract may contribute to the understanding of the genetics of congenital cataract.
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PMID:[The Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome and a congenital cataract]. 1139 83

Despite advances in surgical technique and implant materials, cataract surgery in patients with uveitis is still a challenging procedure. We retrospectively evaluated postoperative outcomes of cataract surgery in 35 eyes of 29 patients with uveitis. Phacoemulsification with posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation was performed in all eyes. Postoperative evaluations were performed at day 2, and then at 7 days, 1, 3, and 6 months respectively. There were 16 males, and 13 females, aged 31 to 68 years. Follow-up ranged from 4 to 35 months. At final follow-up 33 eyes (94%) had an improvement in visual acuity compared with preoperative levels (p < 0,05). Giant cells were observed in the intraocular lens optic in 7 eyes (20%). Posterior capsule opacification occurred in 10 eyes (29%). Clinical cystoid macular edema was observed in 4 eyes, and 2 eyes required trabeculectomy with mitomycin C due to secondary glaucoma. Cataract surgery in patients with uveitis leads to successful visual results after correct surgical timing, and adequate anti-inflammatory therapy. There were no significant differences in the degree of inflammation after implantation of various types of intraocular lenses.
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PMID:Postoperative outcomes after implantation of intraocular lenses in eyes with cataract and uveitis. 1619 67

PurposeThe aim of this study is to report a case series of ocular complications including retinal detachment (RD) and cataract in atopic dermatitis (AD) and surgical management involving a majority of Caucasian patients.Patients and methodsThis study is an observational case series, originally designed as an audit. It involves detailed discussion of history, clinical features, and surgical management of patients presenting with retinal detachment and cataracts secondary to severe AD. Six consecutive patients with diagnosis of severe AD requiring posterior segment and cataract surgery were included in the study.ResultsEight eyes of six patients had retinal detachment. Most of them involved the temporal retina. The retinal breaks were located anteriorly close to the ora serrata in six eyes and Giant tear retinal (GRT) detachment was found in two eyes. Five eyes had proliferative vitreo-retinopathy (PVR) at presentation. All six patients had bilateral cataracts and cataract surgery was performed in eleven eyes. Bilateral simultaneous surgery was essential in two patients. Three eyes had secondary intra-ocular lens (IOL) implantation with pars plana vitrectomy for subluxed lens implant.ConclusionsAnterior retinal breaks and temporal RD are common in retinal detachment secondary to AD. PVR is often present, which makes surgical management difficult. Cataract formation is quite often and late subluxation of IOL may occur.
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PMID:Retinal detachment repair and cataract surgery in patients with atopic dermatitis. 2879 61


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