Abstract: This article reviews the history of the femtosecond laser in ophthalmology and its subsequent introduction into the field of cataract surgery. It discusses the innovations that this technology has brought to the field. The article also describes the current system of teaching cataract surgery to ophthalmology residents in the United States and then examines how femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgery (FLACS) can be a beneficial part of residency education.
Abstract: Deep anterior lamellar keratoplasty (DALK) is preferred over conventional penetrating keratoplasty (PKP) for the treatment of anterior corneal opacities or ectasias due to decreased risk of endothelial rejection. However, DALK remains surgically challenging, largely due to challenges associated with achieving consistent pneumo-dissection of posterior stroma from the underlying pre-Descemet’s or Descemet’s membrane (DM). Air must be injected at sufficient depth in the corneal stroma in order to achieve successful pneumo-dissection, but advancing a needle too deep into the cornea can lead to perforation of DM. We describe here a novel technique using a handheld slit lamp (Eidolon model 510L, Eidolon Optical LLC, Natick, MA, USA) to assist in creation of the big-bubble in DALK surgery. Use of a handheld slit beam intraoperatively is a safe, relatively inexpensive, and effective technique for increasing the success of big-bubble formation in DALK procedures.
Abstract: Despite appropriate management of the systemic disease, patients with diabetes may develop severe forms of diabetic retinopathy that require surgery. Non-clearing vitreous haemorrhage (VH), traction retinal detachment involving the macula, combined traction and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment, progressive fibrovascular proliferation (PFP) and rubeosis with acute VH represent the main indications for surgery. Vitrectomy techniques and surgical tools have developed dramatically in the last decade in order to help the surgeon succeed in these challenging cases.
Abstract: The Guangzhou Twin Eye Study (GTES) is a population-based study of young twins residing in Guangzhou City. The major aim of GTES is to explore the impact of genes, environmental factors and gene-environment interactions on common eye diseases. From 2006, for more than 1,300 twin pairs, age 7–26 years old, progressive ocular phenotypes, such as refraction, ocular biometrics, weight, and height were collected annually, while non-progressive phenotypes such as parental refraction, corneal thickness, retinal fundus, intraocular pressure and DNA only collected at baseline. In the current study, we summarize the major findings on the etiology of myopia in recent decades.
Abstract: Acute retinal arterial ischemia, which includes transient monocular vision loss (TMVL), branch retinal artery occlusion (BRAO), central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) and ophthalmic artery occlusion (OAO), is most commonly the consequence of an embolic phenomenon from the ipsilateral carotid artery, heart or aortic arch, leading to partial or complete occlusion of the central retinal artery (CRA) or its branches. Acute retinal arterial ischemia is the ocular equivalent of acute cerebral ischemia and is an ophthalmic and medical emergency. Patients with acute retinal arterial ischemia are at a high risk of having further vascular events, such as subsequent strokes and myocardial infarctions (MIs). Therefore, prompt diagnosis and urgent referral to appropriate specialists and centers is necessary for further work-up (such as brain magnetic resonance imaging with diffusion weighted imaging, vascular imaging, and cardiac monitoring and imaging) and potential treatment of an urgent etiology (e.g., carotid dissection or critical carotid artery stenosis). Since there are no proven, effective treatments to improve visual outcome following permanent retinal arterial ischemia (central or branch retinal artery occlusion), treatment must focus on secondary prevention measures to decrease the likelihood of subsequent ischemic events.
Background: To present a surgical technique using a rigid intraocular lens as endocapsular supporting device in manual small incision cataract surgery (MSICS) for treating mild-moderate subluxated cataracts.
Methods: In our technique, a single-piece rigid polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) lens was implanted in the bag following the nucleus removal, with its axis vertical to the zonular dialysis. This endocapsular-implanted IOL stretched the bag and provided sufficient stability and lens centration. This technique was performed in 19 eyes with subluxated cataracts, with zonulysis of ≤120 degree and nuclear sclerosis of grade ≤3. Mean follow-up time was 9.8 months.
Results: All eyes had endocapsular IOL implantation during surgery. Intraoperative extension of the dialysis did not occur in any eye. The IOL was placed in the bag in all but 1 case, in which dislocation of the IOL haptic into the vitreous occurred. Though the IOL was slightly decentered in 3 cases, it kept stable. All patients were asymptomatic.
Conclusions: This approach provides a simplified and practical strategy for surgically managing subluxation with mild-moderate zonular loss.
Abstract: Between 2011 and 2013, two large-scale cohort epidemiology studies were launched in Shanghai: the SCALE study, which aimed to provide ocular public health services to cover the entire youth population in Shanghai, and the SCES, which was based on sample surveys and aimed to provide information on the prevalence and incidence of visual impairment and different types of refractive errors. A total of 910,245 children and adolescents were finally enrolled in the SCALE study; three possible methods for monitoring refractive error without mydriasis were tested, and the agreement between the refractive outcomes of three commonly used autorefractors were examined to ensure the accuracy of the results of the SCALE study. A total of 8,627 children were enrolled in the SCES, and the baseline prevalence of different refractive errors, different behaviors associated with 1 year myopic shifts, and the different patterns of 2-year myopia progression between internal migrant and local resident school children have been analyzed. In some subset samples of the SCALE study and the SCES, several refraction components such as choroidal thickness (ChT) and crystalline lens power were also measured, to further elucidate the relationships between the refraction components and myopia as well as the mechanism of myopia incidence and development. The three methods used in Shanghai to prevent and intervene with childhood myopia: increasing outdoor time, low concentration atropine, and use of orthokeratology lens are also addressed in this review.
Background: Retinal endothelial cells are very active and contribute to the integrity of the neurovascular unit. Vascular dysfunction has been proposed to contribute to the pathogenesis of glaucoma. Here, we evaluated the hypothesis that ocular hypertension triggers mitochondrial alterations in endothelial cells impairing the integrity of the blood retinal barrier (BRB).
Methods: Ocular hypertension was induced by injection of magnetic microbeads into the anterior chamber of EndoMito-EGFP mice, a strain expressing green fluorescent protein selectively in the mitochondria of endothelial cells. Capillary density, mitochondrial volume, and the number of mitochondrial components were quantified in 3D-reconstructed images from whole-mounted retinas using Imaris software. Dynamin-related protein (DRP-1), mitofusin-2 (MFN-2) and optic atrophy-1 (OPA-1) expression were assessed by western blot analysis of enriched endothelial cells. Mitochondrial structure was evaluated by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and oxygen consumption rate was monitored by Seahorse analysis. The integrity of the BRB was evaluated by quantifying Evans blue leakage.
Results: Our data demonstrate that two and three weeks after ocular hypertension induction, the total mitochondria volume in endothelial cells decreased from 0.140±0.002 μm3 from non-injured retinas to 0.108±0.005 and 0.093±0.007 μm3, respectively in glaucomatous eyes (mean ± S.E.M, ANOVA, P<0.001; N=6/group). Frequency distribution showed a substantial increase of smaller mitochondria complexes (<0.5 μm3) in endothelial cells from glaucomatous retinas. Significant upregulation of DRP-1 was found in vessels isolated from glaucomatous retinas compared to the intact retinas, while MFN-2 and OPA-1 expression was not affected. Structural alteration in endothelial cell mitochondria was confirmed by TEM, which were accompanied by a 1.93-fold reduction in the oxygen consumption rate as well as 2.6-fold increase in vasculature leakage in glaucomatous retinas (n=3–6/group). In addition, this model did not trigger changes in the density of the vascular network, suggesting that mitochondrial fragmentation was not due to endothelial cell loss.
Conclusions: This study shows that ocular hypertension leads to early alterations in the dynamic of endothelial cell mitochondria, contributing to vascular dysfunction in glaucoma.