Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/22543
Title: Transsclerally fixated intraocular lenses in children
Authors: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Oftalmoloji Bölümü.
Özmen, Ahmet Tuncer
Doğru, Mehmet Tolga
Ertürk, Haluk
Özçetin, Hikmet
6701399730
7006540932
7003716972
6603402155
Keywords: Ophthalmology
Surgery
Pediatric patients
Implantation
Cataracts
Ophthalmology
Surgery
Issue Date: 2002
Publisher: Slack
Citation: Özmen, A. T. vd. (2002). "Transsclerally fixated intraocular lenses in children". Ophthalmic Surgery and Lasers, 33(5), 394-399.
Abstract: To evaluate the visual outcome and complications of transsclerally fixated intraocular lenses (IOLs) in children without sufficient capsular support. Twenty-one aphakic eyes of 18 children (13 boys and 5 girls) who underwent secondary transscleral IOL fixation were evaluated retrospectively. Ten eyes with aphakia after infantile cataract surgery, 7 aphakic eyes following traumatic cataract surgery, and 4 eyes after ectopia lentis surgery received secondary transscleral posterior chamber IOL fixation because of by insufficient posterior capsular support. Visual outcomes and postoperative complications were recorded. After a mean follow up of 22.5 months (range, 12 to 36 months), visual improvement of more than 2 Snellen lines was observed in 9 eyes (42.8%). Preoperative visual acuity could not be assessed in 7 eyes (33.3%) because of associated neurological and developmental disorders. One eye (4.7%) lost 2 Snellen lines of the best corrected visual acuity because of concurrent endophthalmitis and retinal detachment. Pupillary distortion, transient pupillary membrane, pupillary capture as well as strabismus and anterior uveitis, were the most common complications. Endophthalmitis and retinal detachment were the most severe postoperative complications. Transsclerally fixated IOL implantation may be visually rewarding in well selected pediatric cases, but the potential complications would suggest extreme caution in its consideration. Until long-term studies are published, it is difficult to recommend implantation unless it is deemed impossible to provide adequate rehabilitation by other means such as contact lenses or aphakic spectacles
Description: Bu çalışma, 24-29 Mayıs 2000 tarihleri arasında Boston'da düzenlenen Annual Meeting of the American-Society-of-Colon-and-Rectal-Surgeons'da bildiri olarak sunulmuştur.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/22543
ISSN: 0022-023X
Appears in Collections:Scopus
Web of Science

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