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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (collapse)
28,634 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The late complications of corneo-scleral wound healing after the 15th postoperative day were recorded in 108 routine adult cataract operations using 7-0 polyglycolic acid (Dexon) sutures and compared with 80 routine adult cataract operations using 9-0 monofilament nylon (9-10 Ethilon Nylon) sutures. In 37 eyes of the 7-0 Dexon group filtrating blebs, gaping of the corneoscleral wound, anterior chamber collapse, or decrease in the intraocular pressure were observed compared with one filtrating bleb in the 9-0 nylon group. The majority of late complications occurred 22 to 42 days after surgery. Ten filtrating blebs remained after a 5 months' follow-up period. The most probable cause of the late complications in corneo-scleral wound healing was discussed.
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PMID:Late complications of 7-0 polyglycolic (Dexon) sutures in cataract surgery. 41 74

Ipsilateral glaucoma developed in a 51-year-old man with a left-sided temporal lobe arachnoidal cyst. Ultrasonic examination disclosed a cystic orbital lesion adjacent to the optic nerve. Following intracranial decompensation of the arachnoidal cyst, the intraocular pressure dropped markedly. Ultrasonography showed a collapse of the presumed optic nerve sheath cyst. While the exact mechanism producing glaucoma in this patient remains unclear, there was an apparent relationship between the elevated intraocular pressure and the arachnoidal cyst.
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PMID:Arachnoidal cyst invading the orbit. 51 86

Seven patients suffering from heterochromic cyclitis Fuchs had been investigated by gonioscopy after paracentesis of the anterior chamber. Independent to previous intraocular pressure and tonographical results parts or all of the canal of Schlemm were filled with blood, followed by haemorrhage into the trabecular meshwork on several sites and bleeding into the anterior chamber. Three of the patients were operated on because of a chronic secundary glaucoma and the dissected trabecular meshwork was investigated by electron microscopy. Atrophy of the inner--and outer wall of the canal of Schlemm as well as missing of the endothelium of the trabecular meshwork was to be observed. Discussing the gonioscopical observations and electron-microscopical results the glaucoma in heterochromic cyclitis Fuchs seems to be caused by a collapse of the canal of Schlemm and not by increasing resistance in trabecular meshwork by sclerosis or hyaline membranes.
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PMID:[The glaucoma in heterochromic cyclitis Fuchs. Gonioscopic studies and electron microscopic investigations of the trabecular meshwork (author's transl)]. 56 27

The unopened eye maintains a relatively stable spherical contour due to the expansile influence of the intraocular pressure. When the eye is opened this expansile pressure is lost and some degree of collapse of the scleral shell ensues. In eyes with a relatively flaccid sclera an anterior segment incision may induce significant reduction in the volume of the posterior segment of the globe. During intracapsular cataract extraction on such eyes, scleral collapse can cause anterior displacement of the lens and iris when the eye is opened and vitreous loss as soon as the lens is extracted. Scleral collapse tends to occur during intraocular surgery on previously aphakic eyes. In this situation it may become difficult to achieve a vitreous-free anterior sement by open sky vitrectomy. Metallic scleral supporters prevent inward collapse of that portion of the sclera to which they are attached. They do not prevent downward collapse of the posterior sclera shell. Upward traction is required to prevent the downward component of scleral collapse. A system for controlled suspension of the globe during intraocular surgery has been devised and used in a variety of surgical procedures. The apparatus is simple and it does help to minimize downward scleral collapse. It does not prevent scleral identation or distortion by external forces and cannot substitute for inadequate anesthesia and akinesia or faulty surgical technique.
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PMID:Suspension of the globe during intraocular surgery. 75 77

A new piece of equipment was developed that records the intraocular pressure at the time of biomicroscopically observed collapse of the central retinal artery on the optic disc. A special contact lens with a properly adjusted pressure-sensitive probe allows exact observation of the optic disc and manual compression of the eye, whereas the foot-plate of the probe perceives the intraocular pressure through the applanated peripheral cornea.
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PMID:An arteriotonograph. A new instrument for measuring the pressure in the ophthalmic artery. 84 93

The accepted hypotheses for the explanation of retinal venous nicking are critically reviewed and an alternative hypothesis based on a stereological analysis is presented. The ophthalmoscopic appearance of retinal venous nicking is best explained by partial collapse of the vein with the major axis of the venous cross section at right angles to the internal limiting a membrane of the venous blood flow nor of the likelihood of tributary vein occlusion. A partially collapsed vein may be very sensitive to small changes in intraocular pressure. Patients with impending tributary vein occlusion may benefit from reducing intraocular pressure.
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PMID:A stereological analysis of venous nicking observed at retinal arteriovenous crossings. 93 44

A pressure-sensitive probe, specially developed for this purpose, is built into a contact lens in such a manner that when adjusted to the patient's eye the probe registers the intraocular pressure whilst the observer compresses the eyeball and observes the arterial collapse phenomenon on the disc over the contact lens on the slit-lamp microscope. The standard deviation of a clinical measurement is 1.5 mm Hg. Derived from measurements on 65 eyes of patients without signs of vascular disorder, the correlation of the systolic and diastolic ophthalmic artery-pressure (y) to that of the ipsilateral brachial artery (x) is given by Y =0.79x-1.33 (r=0.96) and the correlation of their median pressure by Y=0.93x-17.2 (r=0.94).
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PMID:[The Stepanik arteriotonograph (author's transl)]. 94 59

The collapse-phenomenon of the central retinal artery induced by compression of the eyeball and the pulsatory variations of the intraocular pressure were recorded simultaneously. The collapse-phenomenon indicating the systolic pressure of the ophthalmic artery was correlated to the peak and that indicating the diastolic pressure of the ophthalmic artery to the through of the pulsewave. This finding has to be taken into account when evaluating the curves delivered by Stepanik's ophthalmic artery-tonography.
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PMID:[The relationship of the collapse-phenomenon on the disc to the pulsatory variations of the intraocular pressure (author's transl)]. 120 38

Spontaneous venous pulsation can be observed at the site of entry of retinal veins into the physiological cup of the optic disc. Although it has been speculated that spontaneous vessel pulsation is related to primary open-angle glaucoma, no evaluation has been done on the depth position of such a pulsation inside the cup and its relationship to the intraocular pressure. Using laser scanning tomography, we measured the depth position of the maximal spontaneous vessel pulsation inside the optic cup in 24 discs of 24 patients, including 15 ocular hypertensives and 9 controls. The two groups did not differ significantly in age or refraction. The depth position of the maximal venous collapse, however, showed a significant difference between the two groups (p < 0.005), the mean value being 301 +/- 95 microns beyond the first retinal vessel reflection in the control-group eyes and 507 +/- 193 microns in the ocular hypertensive discs. The location of the depth position of the maximal venous collapse within the excavation could be a parameter that indicates the individual pressure tolerance of the ocular tissues.
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PMID:Depth position of spontaneous venous pulsations in ocular hypertensives and control-group discs. 148 34

Hypotonia and ex vacuo hemorrhages are the most grave complications of vitreoretinal surgery; the known methods of their prevention are altogether inadequate. The authors have developed extra-scleral ballooning (ESB) methods that improve the efficacy of surgery and reduce the rate and severity of complications in subretinal fluid draining during surgery for detachment of the retina and in arresting intraocular hemorrhages during closed vitrectomy. ESB application helped elevate intraocular pressure in the patients with drastic hypotonia, permitting a reliable and easy-to-perform monitoring of intraocular pressure over the course of surgery. This was conducive to complete evacuation of subretinal fluid, thus preventing the development of hypotonia and its complications, as well as to a rapid arrest of intraocular hemorrhage due to rapid elevation of intraocular pressure up to the values essential for the bleeding vessel collapse. Surgical methods are described and their results analyzed in 65 cases. The developed ESB methods for the prevention of hypotonia and intraocular hemorrhages in vitreoretinal surgery are effective, low traumatic, and may be recommended as alternative ones.
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PMID:[Extra-scleral balloon catheterization. Report 3. New ways of its use--prevention of hypotonia and intraocular hemorrhages in vitreo- retinal surgery]. 175 63


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