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Query: UMLS:C0086543 (
cataract
)
29,165
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
I analyzed the frequency and severity of posterior subcapsular cataracts in 291 patients with various forms of hereditary retinal degeneration, including typical retinitis pigmentosa (rod-cone degeneration), cone-rod degeneration, Usher's syndrome, and
choroideremia
. The overall frequency of posterior subcapsular
cataract
was 41%, less than generally thought. Posterior subcapsular cataracts were least common in cone-rod degeneration, and most common in the group with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. Only in the group with sporadic retinitis pigmentosa was a significant sex preference noted; females were affected more often (P less than or equal to .002). Severity was related to age of the patient and duration of disease in those affected. Posterior subcapsular cataract formation is unlikely to be an intrinsic expression of the various genes of hereditary retinal degeneration.
...
PMID:The frequency of posterior subcapsular cataract in the hereditary retinal degenerations. 709 Dec 61
We report the clinical and genetic data obtained at a 17-year follow-up examination of a patient with gyrate atrophy, without an arginine-restricted diet. Patient examinations included visual acuity (VA), perimetry, biomicroscopy, funduscopy, fundus photography, fundus autofluorescence (FAF), spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (OCT), and standard full-field electroretinography (ERG). Blood samples were taken for measurement of serum ornithine level and molecular genetic analysis of the OAT gene. The female was 22 years of age when gyrate atrophy was diagnosed based on peripheral chorioretinal atrophy and an increased ornithine level. Reexamination after 17 years revealed a reduced VA (0.25 OU), dense
cataract
, extensive peripheral chorioretinal atrophy, a further increased ornithine level, but only slow progression of visual field constriction, and still detectable ERG amplitudes. FAF was absent in the atrophic periphery and almost homogeneous at the posterior pole except parafoveally. OCT showed interruption of the foveal inner/outer segment junction and parafoveal microcystoid spaces. After
cataract
surgery, VA increased to the same values as those found at the age of 22 years (0.5 OD, 0.6 OS). Molecular analysis revealed a new deletion c.532_536delTGGGG (p.Trp178X) and a known mutation c.897C>G (p.Tyr299X) in the OAT gene. Although the patient had refused to diet during her first 39 years of life, the gyrate atrophy showed a very slow progression. FAF allows evaluating the integrity of the retinal pigment epithelium and may help to delimit gyrate atrophy from
choroideremia
. Interruption of foveal inner/outer segment junction and cystoid macula edema appears in gyrate atrophy.
...
PMID:Gyrate atrophy: clinical and genetic findings in a female without arginine-restricted diet during her first 39 years of life and report of a new OAT gene mutation. 2267 28
PurposeTo present a case series of
cataract
surgery outcomes in
choroideremia
eyes with an emphasis on the safety of this common operation in advanced stages of the disease.MethodsA single centre retrospective interventional case series comprising six patients with varying degrees of visual loss secondary to
choroideremia
underwent
cataract
surgery at a single tertiary eye hospital. Pre- and post-operative best-corrected Snellen visual acuity, spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), and slit lamp examination were performed together with fundus autofluorescence (FAF) and colour fundus photographs.The prevalence of intra- or post-operative complications, post-operative visual outcome, and change in central macular thickness were recorded.ResultsThe pre-operative best-corrected Snellen visual acuity in the operated eyes ranged from 6/12 (20/40) to PL. All but one patient had either an objective or a subjective improvement in visual acuity. There was no evidence of retinal phototoxicity or post-operative cystoid macular oedema (CMO). Three patients developed early capsular fibrosis.ConclusionsAlthough the residual functioning retina in
choroideremia
patients may be potentially vulnerable, this report finds no evidence of iatrogenic vision loss after uncomplicated
cataract
surgery. This suggests that
cataract
surgery may be performed safely in
choroideremia
patients, although a guarded prognosis for visual improvement should be emphasized in the informed consent.
...
PMID:Outcomes following cataract surgery in choroideremia. 2559 24
Gyrate atrophy is an autosomal recessive dystrophy in which night blindness starts early in the first decade of life. In the early stages, large areas of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and choriocapillaris (CC) atrophy in the far periphery (lobular shape, Fig. 37.1). (In
choroideremia
, atrophy appears in the mid periphery.) Later, these areas coalesce to form a characteristic scalloped border at the junction of healthy and diseased RPE. Myopia and subcapsular
cataract
are common by the end of second or third decade. Unlike in
choroideremia
(which is X-linked), patients with gyrate atrophy show areas of hyperpigmentation of the remaining RPE (Fig. 37.2). Patients with gyrate atrophy do not show the choroidal atrophy (as seen in
choroideremia
) until the late stages. Treatment includes a low-protein, arginine-restricted diet for all patients. In some cases, vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) may help in lowering plasma ornithine levels.
...
PMID:Inborn Errors of Metabolism: Gyrate Atrophy. 3057 10