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

A 60-year-old man had variable visual acuity especially in the right eye for 2 years. The right field of vision showed a hemianopic defect on the nasal side (in addition to reduced visual acuity which was due to nuclear cataract). A localized posterior cortical cataract on the temporal side of the right lens accounted for the nasal field defect since the defect disappeared almost completely on dilatation of the pupil, and completely after cataract extraction. Asymmetrical opacities in the optical media far enough anterior or posterior to the plane of the pupil will produce asymmetrical field defects. (An opacity close to the plane of the pupil will produce concentric constriction.)
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PMID:Field defect due to posterior cortical paraxial lens opacity. A case report. 29 Dec 10

The effect of posterior chamber intraocular lens (IOL) dimensions, design, style, loop fixation, and anterior capsular tears on decentration were investigated in an experimental model. Nine posterior chamber IOLs of various designs and styles with loop diameters between 12.0 and 14.0 mm and optic diameters between 5.0 and 7.0 mm were implanted in human eyes obtained post mortem. Symmetrical and asymmetrical fixation were investigated in eyes with and without radial tears using the Miyake posterior view technique. Location of IOL loops proved to be the most significant factor in IOL decentration. Decentration was least with symmetrical bag/bag fixation and no radial tears (mean = 0.20 +/- 0.05 mm). Asymmetrical bag/sulcus fixation in the presence of anterior capsular tears was associated with the highest decentration rate (mean 0.68 +/- 0.28 mm). Optic size and total loop diameter had no apparent effect on IOL centration in the immediate postoperative period.
J Cataract Refract Surg 1992 Sep
PMID:Prospective experimental study of factors related to posterior chamber intraocular lens decentration. 140 47

Inserting the 13 mm SI-26NB intraocular lens is a challenging task complicated by the need to tuck the modified C-configuration haptics within a folded optic. This step causes undue stress on the haptic and may result in asymmetrical distortion and subsequent decentration. Excluding this step simplifies the technique, as well as decreases the degree of acute angle stress on the haptic as it is passed through the scleral tunnel.
J Cataract Refract Surg 1992 Nov
PMID:Simplified insertion technique for the SI-26NB intraocular lens. 143 78

The case of a newborn boy with ichthyosiform erythroderma, asymmetrical shortening of the femur and sectorial cataract is reported. The hyperkeratotic areas cleared within 2 months, resulting in follicular atrophoderma. The clinical findings and course of the disease, and also the histological and ultrastructural features, indicate an X-linked dominant chondrodysplasia punctata (Happle). Since a normal male karyotype (46, XY) is present, a half-chromatid mutation of the maternal gamete and a somatic mutation are considered as possible explanations for this mosaic phenotype.
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PMID:[X-chromosome dominant chondrodysplasia punctata (Happle) in a boy]. 159 71

Ten years ago we proposed that the limitations on young infants' vision might be caused by an immature Y-pathway through the cortex, while their abilities might be mediated by an X-pathway to the cortex and by Y- and/or W-pathways to the superior colliculus and pretectum (Maurer & Lewis, 1979). Although that explanation was too simple overall, it fits well with what is known about asymmetrical optokinetic nystagmus, viz. the difficulty in eliciting OKN to patterns moving from the nasal field toward the temporal field. In this paper, we describe the development of symmetrical OKN, its alteration by early deprivation from cataract, and its physiological basis. We then suggest that, for primates, an explanation based on projections through the magnocellular versus parvocellular layers of the lateral geniculate nucleus may be more appropriate than one based on X-, Y-, and W-cells.
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PMID:Optokinetic nystagmus in normal and visually deprived children: implications for cortical development. 248 92

To understand how human corneal endothelium compensates for cell loss, nuclear DNA-cytofluorometry and cell morphometry were carried out on injured corneal endothelium. The examined corneas included two cases of keratoconus complicated with acute hydrops and one without acute hydrops, two cases of herpetic keratitis, one case of post-intracapsular cataract extraction (post-ICCE) and one case of luetic keratitis. The endothelial cell layer was separated from Descemet's membrane and double-stained with Rhodamine-labeled wheat germ agglutinin-lectin (WGA) and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI). The area of each cell was measured with a color image analyser and compared with its cytofluorometric nuclear DNA content. The endothelium in apparently intact regions of the diseased corneas showed the same DNA-ploidy pattern and cell area as the physiological corneas. However, endothelial cells in injured regions had greater area, even in diploidy, than in presumably normal ones and showed a larger number of hyperploid cells ranging from 4C to 36C. Hyperploid cells consisted of many multinucleates and few polyploidies and had extremely large and bizarre cytoplasm. All injured corneas were accompanied by cells with numerous micronuclei. A few asymmetrical 4C-binucleates (with DNA values such as 1.3 plus 2.6C) appeared in the case of the post-ICCE. It is concluded that damage to human corneal endothelial cells in vivo results in cell enlargement with or without DNA synthesis. Those changes appear more severe in diseased corneas than in the situation of physiological aging which we have reported previously. In severe cases, micronuclei, polyploid cells and multinucleated giant cells are frequent, thereby suggesting a possible long-persistent metabolic impairment of the endothelium after severe damage to the cornea.
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PMID:Changes in nuclear DNA content and cell size of injured human corneal endothelium. 340 92

Cataracts are suggested as a diagnostic marker to differentiate between the three types of chondrodysplasia punctata so far known. Both the rhizomelic and the X-linked dominant types are associated with cataracts in about two-thirds of the cases. In the rhizomelic type, the opacities tend to be bilateral and symmetrical. In the X-linked dominant type they are usually asymmetrical and often unilateral. In contrast, the consistent lack of cataracts is characteristic of the autosomal dominant type of chondrodysplasia punctata.
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PMID:Cataracts as a marker of genetic heterogeneity in chondrodysplasia punctata. 746 Mar 83

The uveitis-glaucoma-hyphema (UGH) syndrome is a triad that rarely occurs in the late postoperative period after an extracapsular cataract extraction (ECCE) with implantation of a posterior chamber (PC) intraocular lens (IOL). Surgical techniques as well as IOL design can influence the incidence of the UGH syndrome. We describe two patients who developed an UGH syndrome respectively 5 and 6 years after an ECCE with implantation of a flexible closed-loop one-plane PC IOL of the Anis type. Intraoperatively, an envelope technique had been used. Although no tears had occurred, an asymmetrical bag-sulcus fixation of the IOL had been obtained, with manifest upward decentration of the IOL, probably eroding the ciliary sulcus by its closed loops, acting as a semi-rigid system.
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PMID:Uveitis-glaucoma-hyphema syndrome: a late complication of posterior chamber lenses. 789 58

Cataract surgery is known to induce refractive and corneal astigmatism, but little is known regarding the specific corneal topographic alterations produced by this surgery. We evaluated the corneal topographic effects of extracapsular cataract extraction (ECCE) performed with an 8- to 11-mm posterior limbal incision closed with interrupted sutures and subsequent selective suture removal. Corneal topography was analyzed in 15 eyes with the TMS-1 videokeratoscope preoperatively, before selective suture removal 4-6 weeks after surgery, 2-5 weeks after selective removal of sutures, and at 5 1/2-8 months after surgery. The Surface Regularity Index was significantly increased before suture removal and after suture removal but returned to normal at the final examination. The Irregular Astigmatism Index remained significantly increased at all examinations after surgery. Corneal asymmetry (Surface Asymmetry Index) continued to be significantly increased compared with the preoperative examination after suture removal and at 6 months after surgery. The standard deviation of powers (SDP) was significantly elevated before and immediately after suture removal, but was not significantly different at 6 months. Mean corneal astigmatism remained significantly increased (0.80 +/- 0.11 preoperatively, 1.39 +/- 0.24 at maximum follow-up, p = 0.04). Significant changes in corneal topography occurred in each patient between suture removal and final examinations. A few patients developed against-the-rule astigmatism ranging from 0.6 to 2.2 diopters. ECCE significantly altered corneal tomography compared with the preoperative contour in all patients. In those patients in whom surgically induced nonspherical and noncylindrical distortions occur (radially asymmetrical power distribution, lack of central corneal smoothness), corneal topography may provide information that is useful for management.
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PMID:Prospective study of corneal topographic changes produced by extracapsular cataract surgery. 892 69

Recently, a new preferential looking (PL) test has been presented for measuring visual acuity in infants and young children (Cardiff Acuity Test, CAT). The PL target is a schematic vanishing picture composed of isoluminant lines with different spatial orientations. Fifty-three healthy children (4-34 months, group 1), 28 (4-35 months) children at risk for amblyopia due to strabismus (group 2), 19 healthy subjects, and 157 patients (group 3) were tested with the CAT. In group 2 the CAT was compared with the fixation preference test. In group 3 the CAT was compared with a recognition test (Landolt C test). In group 1 the interocular difference of the CAT data was a maximum of 1 dB (70% 0 dB, 30% 1 dB, 1/3 so-called octave). Thus, an interocular difference of > 1 dB was considered to be suggestive of monocular or asymmetrical visual impairment. The maximum value 6/6 was frequently achieved (RE 44%, LE 36%, > 18 months RE 57%, LE 46%). In group 2 only 20% of the monolateral strabismic children showed an interocular difference > 1 dB in the CAT. In group 3 we found significant correlations between the CAT and Landolt acuity. A ratio of about 1.7/1 between CAT and Landolt acuity remained constant in cataract eyes as compared to healthy eyes. In amblyopic eyes due to strabismus this ratio was 3.7/1. Thus, amblyopia was underestimated with the CAT. Without limiting the examination distance, interocular differences > 1 dB in the CAT occurred in 52% of the strabismic amblyopic patients (potential sensitivity). At a distance of 1 m this rate decreased to 22% (real sensitivity). In conclusion, the CAT definitely lacks sensitivity for strabismic amblyopia. The data suggest that the real sensitivity could be improved by using higher spatial frequencies. The use of familiar shapes instead of gratings such as PL targets affects cooperation favorably in 12- to 36-month-old children.
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PMID:[Examinations with the Cardiff Acuity Test]. 896 27


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