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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The pathologic basis for presbyopia is classically attributed to lenticular sclerosis or atrophy of the ciliary muscle, but recent work suggests that thickening and loss of elasticity of the anterior lens capsule play an important role. As no practical means for attenuating or reversing the aging process of lens protein has been identified, alteration of the lens capsule eventually might prove to be a desirable alternative to spectacle correction in presbyopic individuals. This paper describes changes in the refractive properties of the lens resulting from alteration of the anterior lens capsule by application of focal cautery, using both an in vitro, in situ and an in vivo rabbit model. In vitro thermal treatment (electrocautery) of the capsule significantly increased the anterior curvature of the lens by an average of +2.95 diopters. Histologic examination of the treated lenses showed thinning of the capsule in the treated areas, as well as focal vacuolar degeneration in the lens substance beneath the lesions. In vivo thermal treatment of eyes induced a significant shift toward myopia, compared with control eyes. The accommodative range increased post-treatment relative to the controls, but the effect diminished over time, stabilizing near baseline at two to three weeks after treatment. Histologic examination showed localized changes but no signs of diffuse cataract formation. We conclude that the anterior capsule may play a significant role in the refractive power and accommodative changes in the crystalline lens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
J Cataract Refract Surg 1994 Mar
PMID:Refractive changes induced by electrocautery of the rabbit anterior lens capsule. 820 61

The biocompatibility of hydrogel intracorneal lenses (ICLs) implanted in monkey eyes was evaluated for periods ranging up to five years. Seventy-three plus or minus powered ICLs made of Lidofilcon A (68% water) or Lidofilcon B (79% water) were implanted following lamellar dissection with a microkeratome. Ten sham surgical procedures were performed without ICL implantation as controls. Eyes were followed for up to five years by slitlamp biomicroscopy and specular microscopy. Light and transmission electron microscopic evaluations of enucleated eyes were performed at various intervals. Minimal tissue reaction was noted; both hydrogel materials appeared to be equally well tolerated. Failures usually occurred as a result of microkeratome problems encountered during surgery. Histopathological changes to the cornea included epithelial thinning anterior to the thickest portion of the ICL, fibroblastic activity along the ICL-stromal interface, and deposition of an amorphous extracellular material adjacent to the ICL. These observations did not appear to be clinically significant as the eyes were quiet by slitlamp examination. Removal of three ICLs eight to ten months prior to enucleation restored the normal histological characteristics of the cornea. The endothelial cell density of ICL-implanted eyes decreased by 4.3% (n = 17) six months after surgery but remained stable thereafter. The variation in endothelial cell area and percentage of hexagonal cells did not change over 50 months. The results appear to demonstrate that high water content synthetic ICLs can be well tolerated in the monkey cornea for up to five years.
J Cataract Refract Surg 1993 Mar
PMID:Assessment of the long-term corneal response to hydrogel intrastromal lenses implanted in monkey eyes for up to five years. 848 63

Inhaled corticosteroids are being given to more patients, at increasing doses and for longer periods of time. This has led to renewed concern about side-effects, particularly when higher doses (> 1 mg day-1) are used. The side-effects of particular concern are adrenocortical suppression, bone resorption, decreased growth in children, skin thinning and cataract formation. Changes in adrenocortical function are seen in a small proportion of patients given doses of 1-2 mg day-1. Long-term studies of the effect of inhaled corticosteroids on bone density are not available. Cross-sectional studies of bone density have been performed, but confounding variables, such as previous courses of oral corticosteroids and poor matching of control groups, make the studies difficult to interpret. Short-term effects on markers of bone turnover have been demonstrated, but their relevance to the long-term risk of osteoporosis is unclear. Studies reporting an increased incidence of skin changes and cataract formation are difficult to interpret because of confounding variables and inadequate control groups. Further studies of the long-term side-effects of inhaled corticosteroids are now required to enable prescribers to judge better the relative benefits and risks of this important asthma therapy.
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PMID:Safety of high-dose inhaled corticosteroids. 849 12

Autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive and X-linked recessive varieties of spastic paraplegia have been recognized. Recently, Japanese patients with complicated form of autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) associated with hypoplasia of the corpus callosum have been reported by Iwabuchi et al. We describe a patient with complicated HSP (Iwabuchi type) and cataracta. A 38-year-old man (his parents were a second cousin) was born uneventfully. His motor development was normal. Motor and mental dysfunctions were noticed during the lower classes of an elementary school. He could ride a bicycle at 18 years old but gradually developed galt disturbance and confined to wheelchair since 35 years. He was admitted to our hospital on February 25, 1994. A neurological examination showed mental retardation, dementia, cataracta, cerebellar ataxia, rigidity, spasticity, severe atrophy of the distal muscles of his extremities, paraparesis, hyperreflexia, positive Hoffmann reflexes and Babinski signs, pes cavus and hammer toes. Brain MRI showed thinning of corpus callosum. Clinical and laboratory findings did not support a diagnosis of metabolic disorders showing spastic paraparesis including adrenomyeloneuropathy, Globoid leukodystrophy, metachromatic leukodystrophy, cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis, Arginase deficiency. We considered that our patient was complicated form of HSP (Iwabuchi et al). However, cataract has not been found in Iwabuchi type of HSP. We discussed here other reports showing cataracta with spastic paraparesis.
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PMID:[A case of complicated form of hereditary spastic paraplegia associated with hypoplasia of the corpus callosum and cataracta]. 877 6

An 8-month-old girl was examined because of corneal clouding and microphthalmos. The fundi of both eyes could not be visualized because of corneal clouding. Orbital and cranial computerized tomographic scanning and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated bilateral microphthalmos and presumed retinal dysplasia, hypoplasia of the optic nerves and chiasm, agenesis of the septum pellucidum, thinning of corpus callosum, and a normal pituitary infundibulum. Cerebral cortex and white matter were unremarkable. Other ocular malformations were anterior segment dysgenesis in the right eye and congenital cataract or lens abnormality in the left eye. Endocrine studies revealed normal serum hormone levels. There were no colobomatous lesions and systemic anomalies suggestive of a coloboma syndrome. This case represents the rare association of septo-optic dysplasia with complex microphthalmos.
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PMID:Septo-optic dysplasia associated with bilateral complex microphthalmos. 890 51

We describe a case of corneal perforation and decompensation after automated lamellar keratoplasty (ALK) in a middle-aged hyperopic man who had had unsuccessful holmium laser thermokeratoplasty. The corneal decompensation responded to gluing and application of a bandage contact lens but despite treatment, the corneal flap remained precariously poised with a localized area of thinning that is predisposed to future perforation and decompensation. This case highlights the potential for serious complications and subsequent visual morbidity after ALK.
J Cataract Refract Surg
PMID:Corneal perforation and decompensation after automated lamellar keratoplasty for hyperopia. 929 59

Ferromagnetic (FM) hyperthermia has previously been evaluated in a rabbit tumour model of ocular melanoma. To study the effect of focal heating in normal rabbit eyes, FM seeds were implanted into a 14-mm episcleral plaque an heated to operating temperatures of 48 or 58 degrees C. Thermal induction was performed by placing rabbits in a uniform, oscillating (11 kHz) magnetic field operating at 1200 W and as H-field strength of 265 A/m. Eyes were heated for 60 min with continuous scleral temperature monitoring. Hyperthermic effects were monitored by direct opthalmic examination, fundus photography, serial electroretinography and histopathology. Intraocular temperatures were mapped with direct fiberoptic thermometry. All treatment effects were confined to the area covered by the episcleral plaque. Direct ophthalmoscopic examination revealed early retinal whitening during heat induction followed by localized exudative retinal detachments, limited to the area of the retinal surface overlying the plaque, that resolved spontaneously. Serial electroretinography was virtually indistinguishable between the 48 and 54 degrees C temperature groups. We noted a minimal alteration in a- and b-wave amplitudes with no changes in implicit times. Histopathology at 3 weeks post-treatment documented chorioretinal scarring overlying the thermal plaque treatment zone. No evidence of heamorrhage infection, cataract or scleral thinning was noted. This study documents the apparent focal containment of thermal effects with FM heating utilizing operating temperatures ad high as 54 degrees C for 60 min, and discloses no evidence of diffuse ocular toxicity.
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PMID:Ferromagnetic hyperthermia: functional and histopathologic effects on normal rabbit ocular tissue. 927 71

Thinning of the ozone layer is predicted to result in increased levels of ultraviolet (UV) B radiation at the earth's surface. This effect has been confirmed by measurements made in relatively unpolluted areas such as Antarctica, the southern part of South America and at mid-to-high latitudes in the northern hemisphere. It has been harder to show in populated northern latitudes because of a number of confounding factors, notably weather systems and low level ozone pollution. Although UVB forms only a small proportion of the UV spectrum it has potent biological effects so that a small increase in penetration of UVB to the earth's surface has profound effects on a wide range of life forms. Most attention has been paid to the effects of an increase in UVB on human health, particularly the effects on skin cancer, resistance to infectious diseases and cataract formation. However, the effects of increased levels of UVB on other parts of the ecosystem, particularly on the primary producers in aquatic and terrestrial food chains, may be of even.
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PMID:The biological effects of ozone depletion. 951 7

A 26 year-old woman, whose parents were consanguineously married, was admitted to our center because of bilateral juvenile cataract. The patient exhibited short stature, sclerodermalike appearance of the skin with a typical bird-like facies, thinning and graying of hair, high pitched voice and hypogonadism. Werner's syndrome, was diagnosed. History, pathogeny, clinical features, diagnosis and cataract surgery are discussed.
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PMID:[Werner syndrome. Apropos of a case]. 975 41

Two patients had bilateral laser in situ keratomileusis on the same day at the same center. Both developed severe interface inflammation in the second of the 2 eyes treated, which led to stromal thinning corneal haze, and resultant hyperopia. These symptoms partially resolved over 7 weeks of follow-up.
J Cataract Refract Surg 1998 Sep
PMID:Interface keratitis-induced stromal thinning: an early postoperative complication of laser in situ keratomileusis. 976 9


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