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

We reviewed the charts of 420 consecutive extracapsular cataract extraction cases in which the surgeon's primary intention was to implant a posterior chamber lens. Posterior chamber lens implantation was precluded in eight cases (1.9%) because of vitreous loss or capsule dehiscence. A visual acuity of 20/40 or better was achieved by 83.8% of patients. When nonoperative causes of poor vision were eliminated, this result was achieved by 96.7% of patients. The percentage of patients achieving 20/40 or better acuity decreased with increasing age but remained constant despite varying follow-up periods. The most common complication was opacification of the posterior capsule, occurring in 25.7%; 83.8% of the complications occurred during the first two postoperative years. We conclude that extracapsular cataract extraction with primary posterior chamber lens implantation is an efficient way to restore good vision after cataract formation and that the results appear to remain stable over time.
J Cataract Refract Surg 1986 Jan
PMID:Extracapsular cataract extraction and primary posterior chamber lens implantation. 395 51

The American Institute of Nutrition purified ingredient diet (AIN-76) prevented occurrence of mature cataracts associated with hereditary retinal degeneration in pink-eyed, tan-hooded Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rats. Rats fed a natural ingredient open formula NIH diet or a closed formula commercial diet had a cataract incidence of 27-29% by 3 to 12 months of age. In contrast, only 1 of 50 rats fed the AIN diet developed a mature cataract in one year. When the NIH diet and the commercial diet were pelleted with 25% of ground sunflower kernels, rats fed these diets had a delay in onset and a reduced incidence of mature cataracts to 18% and 5%, respectively. No mature cataracts occurred in rats fed the AIN diet supplemented with 25% sunflower kernels. All diets were fed to the parental generation as well as the progeny (experimental group). The rats were reared at a low level of illumination (1-3 footcandles inside the cage) to minimize effects of light. Prevention of mature cataracts by the AIN purified diet suggests that diets permitting cataracts to occur may have a constituent at a concentration innocuous for normal rats but beyond the homeostatic control of the RCS rat. Posterior subcapsular cataracts of RCS rats are a model for cataracts associated with human hereditary retinal degenerations, such as retinitis pigmentosa and gyrate atrophy. Manipulation of dietary ingredients allowed by the use of the AIN diet may permit identification of nutrients, nutrient interactions of toxic factors involved in cataractogenesis and its prevention.
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PMID:Dietary prevention of cataracts in the pink-eyed RCS rat. 398 59

By administering fluorescein intravenously to 95 patients we calculated the ratio of fluorescein concentration in the vitreous at the time of its peak level compared with the estimated unbound concentration of fluorescein in the plasma at the same time. We studied 12 normal phakic and 83 aphakic eye approximately two months, one year, and more than two years after cataract extraction. All the eyes had undergone intracapsular cataract extraction or extracapsular cataract extraction, with or without posterior capsulotomy, because of senile cataract. The calculated ratio in patients with intracapsular and extracapsular lens extraction was statistically significantly reduced at two months and one year after cataract extraction and was normalised at more than two years after the operation in comparison with normal subjects. The ratio was statistically extracapsular extraction at two months and one year after surgery. Posterior capsulotomy had no effect on the ratio. The ratio, we considered, at least partially reflects the outward transport of fluorescein from the vitreous cavity. Although the findings reflect subclinical phenomena, they are of importance when considering postoperative sequelae. The posterior lens capsule, zonule, and intact anterior vitreous face may be essential for the anterior uvea to function in the outward transport of fluorescein from the vitreous cavity.
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PMID:Outward transport of fluorescein from the vitreous in aphakic eyes. 400 10

Posterior subcapsular cataracts developed in rabbits following injection of docosahexenoic acid. Autoxidation of docosahexenoic acid in rabbit vitreous was demonstrated by the formation of malondialdehyde and vitreous fluorescence. The onset of posterior subcapsular cataract formation was temporally correlated with declining levels of vitreous malondialdehyde.
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PMID:A lipid peroxidative mechanism for posterior subcapsular cataract formation in the rabbit: a possible model for cataract formation in tapetoretinal diseases. 623 39

The blood-aqueous humor barrier in adult rhesus monkeys was opened by intracarotid infusion of a 25% mannitol solution. Each monkey had one to four infusions into the same artery, with at least one week between subsequent procedures. The monkeys were observed clinically for 3 to 212 days. Within an hour pigmented cells and protein accumulated in the aqueous humor of the mannitol-treated eyes. Hypotony developed within a day. Aqueous flare and cells cleared within 2 weeks. Hypotony resolved in 8 to 12 weeks. More than one half of the monkeys had transient anisocoria. In some, the pupil in the treated eye was miotic; in others it was dilated. Direct and consensual pupil responses to light remained intact in untreated eyes and in treated eyes with mydriasis. About one fourth of the monkeys developed edema of the ipsilateral optic disk. This correlated with hypotony. No monkey developed cataract, corneal opacity, or vitreous or retinal change. The aqueous protein concentration was slightly above normal a month or more after the carotid infusions, but was considerably less than plasma protein concentration. Posterior and anterior aqueous ascorbate concentrations in treated eyes were slightly below normal, but far greater than plasma concentration, indicating that ascorbate active transport by the ciliary epithelium was essentially intact despite the widespread, permanent structural alteration that had been caused by the mannitol treatment.
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PMID:Long-term ocular effects of osmotic modification of the blood-brain barrier in monkeys. I. Clinical examinations; aqueous ascorbate and protein. 640 59

We reviewed the records of 596 consecutive cases of vitrectomy performed for complications of diabetic retinopathy at the Wilmer Eye Institute. Accidental lens damage occurred during surgery in three eyes. Fourteen (8%) of 180 phakic eyes underwent later cataract removal. Follow-up of at least six months and detailed description of the lens at final examination were available in 151 eyes. Of these, visually significant opacities occurred in 32 eyes (21%), and the lens opacities accounted for substantial loss of final vision in 6 (19%) of these 32 eyes. Moderate or severe lens opacities that developed postoperatively were as follows: anterior subcapsular or cortical changes in 2 eyes (1%), nuclear sclerosis in 11 eyes (7%), posterior subcapsular changes in 25 eyes (17%). One hundred twenty-five preoperative, operative and postoperative factors were analyzed for each patient to detect correlations with postoperative lens changes. Nuclear sclerotic changes correlated with older patient age. Posterior subcapsular changes correlated with three intraoperative factors: longer duration of the operation, use of intravitreal gas, and use of a gas bubble filling more than 50% of the vitreous cavity. Posterior subcapsular changes were progressive with longer follow-up.
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PMID:The crystalline lens after vitrectomy for diabetic retinopathy. 652 88

Posterior polymorphous dystrophy of the cornea (Schlichting) was found in a 51-year-old male. In addition, the patient had a cerulean cataract and myopia. The PPD, which was thought to have been caused by endothelial degeneration, exhibited extremely variable expressivity. Of the patient's 3 children only the 19-year-old son, who is also myopic, has cerulean cataract; on specular microscopic examination he was also found to be suffering from endothelial changes.
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PMID:[Endothelial changes in posterior polymorphous corneal dystrophy]. 660 4

Animal studies were conducted to compare variations in intraocular (IOP) and posterior segment pressure (PSP) during general anesthesia to assess the role of PSP in the development of anesthesia for ophthalmological procedures. Anesthetic agents appear to have a marked effect on IOP during operations involving opening of hypertonic globe or examinations of children under general anesthesia, but their action on IOP has no significance during procedures requiring opening of the anterior chamber because of alteration of aqueous humor physiology. The PSP, defined as pressure in the posterior segment when the anterior segment is at atmospheric pressure, is the main factor affecting surgical conditions, a rise in PSP possibly resulting in typical complications of cataract surgery but having beneficial effects in corneal grafts for example. Posterior segment pressure cannot be studied in humans and an experimental model using rabbits under artificial ventilation following tracheotomy after general anesthesia was developed. Pressure gauges recorded arterial and central venous pressures and were connected to needles inserted in both eyes to monitor IOP and PSP, the latter from a needle passed into the anterior chamber through the cornea, which was incised over the needle to enable permanent drainage of aqueous humor. All pressures were recorded simultaneously and no correlations were observed between IOP and PSP after pentobarbitone, neosynephrine, succinylcholine, or asphyxia (interruption of ventilation and curarization). These findings suggest that IOP is not a valid measurement for assessment of anesthetic techniques, whereas PSP provides a better guideline for development of ophthalmological anesthesia.
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PMID:[Experimental study of changes in the pressure of the posterior segment of the eye under general anesthesia. Consequences for surgery of the anterior segment]. 663 Aug 89

A retrospective analysis of 388 records of patients undergoing surgery for cataract between the years 1968 and 1978 showed that more women than men were admitted. About 13.7% of the patients were diabetic, and there was a striking excess of women over men with diabetes and cataract. The diabetic patients required surgery at an earlier age than the non-diabetics. Patients who had been refracted at least 5 years before surgery showed an incidence of myopia of -1.00 D or more of 25.4%. In 34% of the whole series the aphakic refraction was less than +11.00 D, again suggesting that myopes are more likely to develop a cataract than non-myopes. Posterior subcapsular lens changes alone or in combination with nuclear or cortical opacities were present in over 40% of all patients and the mean age of patients with this type of change alone was significantly lower than patients with predominantly nuclear or cortical changes. Posterior subcapsular opacities seem to be more common in Iowa than in England or India. The morphological similarity of this type of lens change with known types of secondary cataract suggests that it is not entirely a senile change but may be due to environmental or dietetic factors.
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PMID:Cataract: refractive error, diabetes, and morphology. 671 5

Of 744 leprous patients, 61 (8.2%) had cataract-induced blindness; 46 patients (6.2%) were unilaterally blind and 15 (2.0%) were bilaterally blind. The mean age of patients with cataracts was 63.4 years in the tuberculoid-type leprosy and 56.4 years in the lepromatous type. The appearance of cataracts in lepromatous patients at an earlier age than in tuberculoid patients is significant (p less than 0.005). Of 41 cataractous eyes with posterior iris synechiae, 42.1% were observed in patients with tuberculoid-type leprosy and 59.1% in patients with the lepromatous type. Histopathological examination of 24 lenses showed that irregularities of the lens epithelium were present in 79.2%. Posterior iris synechiae were seen in 66.7% and fibrous pseudometaplasia in 41.7%. Posterior migration of the lens epithelium in the posterior subcapsular area was observed in 54.2%. In view of these clinical and histopathological findings, we discuss the probability that most cataracts in leprous patients are complicated in nature.
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PMID:Blindness from cataract formation in leprosy. 682 94


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