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

Anterior segment ischemia changes can occur without detachment of any muscles. The most common cause of such ischemic changes of the anterior segment is the removal of too many rectus muscles in one operation. Twenty dog eyes and eight monkey eyes were subjected to the disinsertion and detachment of various combinations of extraocular muscles. They were sacrificed at intervals from 30 to 90 days. During the observation period, they were observed for gross and slit lamp changes. The enucleated eyes were studied microscopically for signs of ischemic and necrotic changes. Two patients who were studied, observed, and treated for anterior segment ischemia following muscle surgery are described. The changes which occur after muscle surgery are extensive and include corneal edema, cataract, chemosis, corneal changes, decreases in intraocular pressure, decreases in outflow or glaucoma and frank necrosis. The variables which lead to this reaction is described in detail. Also, some unanswered queries, such as the duration of the reaction and the time interval of the reaction after multiple muscle surgeries, are discussed.
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PMID:Production of anterior segment ischemia. 10 21

A new type of hereditary cataract was predicted in the deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus) by the presence of syndactyly of the hind feet. Early morphologic changes were found in the equatorial cells that differentiated into new lens fibers. Later swelling at the anterior and posterior poles of these cells produced lens opacities. Anterior and posterior subcapsular cataracts progressed to a hypermature shrunken lens.
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PMID:Hereditary cataracts in deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus). 16 95

Anterior segment ischemic changes can occur without detachment of any muscles. The most common cause of such ischemic changes of the anterior segment is the removal of too many rectus muscles in one operation. Twenty dog eyes and eight monkey eyes were subjected to the disinsertion and detachment of various combinations of extraocular muscles. The dogs were sacrificed at intervals from 30 to 90 days. During the observation period, they were observed for gross and slit-lamp changes. The enucleated eyes were studied microscopically for signs of ischemic and necrotic changes. Two patients who were studied, observed, and treated for anterior segment ischemia following muscle surgery are described. The changes which occur after extraocular muscle surgery are extensive and include corneal edema, cataract, chemosis, corneal changes, decreases in intraocular pressure, decreases in outflow or glaucoma, and frank necrosis. The variables which lead to this reaction are described in detail. Also, some unanswered queries, such as the duration of the reaction and the time interval of the reaction after multiple muscle operations are discussed.
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PMID:Production of anterior segment ischemia. 41 49

Six cases representing different stages of cataract formation secondary to eye trauma were subjected to quantitative microradiographic or electron microscopic examination. Anterior and posterior subcapsular cataracts were found to contain extensively swollen lens fibers in the subcapsular cortex. Microradiographic measurements revealed a reduced concentration of dry mass in the subcapsular cortex around the whole circumference of the lens. The inner cortex and the nucleus appeared normal both microradiographically and electron-microscopically. Two of the examined cases had an opaque-cataract membrane and one had a Soemmerring's ring. The opaque membranes consisted of irregular masse of degenerated lens fiber material as well as regenerated lens epithelial cells. A wide range of dry mass concentration was found in the opaque membrane that was studied microradiographically. Alterations in morphology and dry mass concentration are more than sufficient to explain the development of opacification in traumatic cataract.
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PMID:Human traumatic cataract. A quantitative microradiographic and electron microscopic study. 41 73

Human lenses extracted for cataract 26 years after long-term exposure to an imperfectly shielded radium source were examined by slit-lamp photography, thin-section light microscopy, and electron microscopy. Anterior epithelial cells were fibroblast-like, and germinal epithelium and vacuolated cortical fibres had accumulated at the equator. A zone of light scatter at the anterior pole corresponded to an area of breakdown of cortical lens fibres, where unusual feathery fibres were orientated perpendicular to the lens surface. Two zones of light scatter separated by a 250-microM clear interval were seen in the posterior cortex. The zone at the posterior pole corresponded to an area of fibre liquefaction and large rounded membrane whorls, while the deeper zone comprised small flattened membrane whorls. The characteristic plaques of swollen abnormal cells described in previous histological studies of x-ray cataract were not present. This and other differences probably reflect the extremely long time course and repeated subliminal doses to which the patient was exposed.
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PMID:Influence of a prolonged period of low-dosage x-rays on the optic and ultrastructural appearances of cataract of the human lens. 46 19

Our results of anterior vitrectomy in 12 patients with vitreo-corneal touch following cataract extraction, and in three patients with ghost-cell glaucoma due to vitreous hemorrhage were reported. The Machemer vitreous infusion suction cutter was used for pars plana and trans-corneal approaches. Anterior vitrectomy was effective in treating both disorders.
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PMID:Anterior vitrectomy for complications of cataract extraction. 54 29

Long-term steroid therapy is associated with production of a posterior subcapsular cataract (PSC). Five steroid-associated cataractous lenses were studied, using light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy. Anterior, equatorial, and posterior regions were examined. Findings were compared with five age-matched senile PSCs and five nuclear cataractous lenses with no cortical opacities. The posterior polar region of steroid-associated cataractous lenses consists of (1) a superficial zone of liquefaction and (2) a deep zone of segmentally swollen lens fibers. Nucleated lens fibers are present in posterior cortical regions. Cytoplasm at knob and socket junctions had become lucent and plasma membranes were disappearing, leaving empty spaces. Laminated membranous configurations were seen. Although the same basic histopathologic abnormalities were found in steroid-associated cataracts and in nonsteroid senile PSCs, it is their organization and localization that may be the distinguishing characteristics of the steroid-associated cataract.
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PMID:Posterior subcapsular cataracts: histopathologic study of steroid-associated cataracts. 75 90

Anterior chamber utility forceps were designed primarily to remove capsular fragments and aid in performing iridectomies through small incisions in extracapsular cataract extractions.
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PMID:Microsurgical anterior chamber utility forceps. 83 59

In a randomized, double-blind clinical trial we studied the protective effect of prednisolone-acetate 1.0% and dexamethasone 0.1% on the blood-aqueous barrier after cataract-extraction and posterior chamber lens implantation. Pre- and postoperative anterior chamber fluorophotometry was performed after i.v. administration of 10% fluorescein-sodium in 20 eyes of 20 patients of whom 16 finished the study (mean age 68.7 +/- 11.0; 13 female, 3 male). The topical application of either drug 5 times daily for 5 days did show a significant difference in surgery mediated disturbance of BAB in each group before and after phacoemulsification. However, when comparing the effect of the two drugs with each other, a difference could not be detected (p = 0.35). To attain a statistical 95% probability that there is no significant difference between the two treatment groups, a number of 690 patients would have had to be investigated. The results can be interpreted as to be due to a better cornea penetration of prednisolone-acetate which compensate the higher glucocorticoid-potency and receptor-affinity of dexamethasone. The untreated fellow-eyes did not reveal a significant difference between the pre- and postoperative anterior chamber fluorescein-concentrations in either treatment group. Anterior chamber fluorophotometry is able to demonstrate the potency and influence of both prednisolone-acetate 1.0% and dexamethasone 0.1% eye-drops on the BAB following phacoemulsification and IOL-implantation. The difference of both drugs does not seem to be of clinical importance in this context.
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PMID:[Effect of 0.1% dexamethasone and 1.0% prednisolone acetate eyedrops on the blood-aqueous humor barrier]. 130 12

Anterior as well as posterior lens capsule are nowadays the object of interest because of their importance. Discussing the cataract surgery the author presents the role of the lens capsule in the process of the inter-capsular technique of cataract extraction and in the postoperative course.
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PMID:[Significance of anterior and posterior lens capsule in inter-capsular cataract surgery]. 130 40


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