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Medicine Jun 2024To evaluate the clinical effects between dexamethasone and triamcinolone acetonide (TA) after phacoemulsification and intraocular lens implantation among cataract... (Comparative Study)
Comparative Study Meta-Analysis
PURPOSE
To evaluate the clinical effects between dexamethasone and triamcinolone acetonide (TA) after phacoemulsification and intraocular lens implantation among cataract patients.
METHODS
Pubmed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library were searched for studies published up to August 2020. The primary outcome was intraocular pressure. The secondary outcomes were the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR), anterior chamber cell, and anterior chamber flare. The pooled effect sizes were expressed as weighted mean differences (WMDs) or standardized mean differences (SMDs) of 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs). Cochrane Collaboration risk of bias tool and Newcastle-Ottawa scale criteria were used for the quality assessment of included studies.
RESULTS
Seven relevant studies met the inclusion criteria. For the primary outcome, there was no significant difference between TA injection and dexamethasone in comparing intraocular pressure (IOP) (SMD = 0.22, 95% confidence interval [CI] [-0.29, 0.73], P = .408; I² = 86.9%) in the first day after treatment and last day of assessment. For the secondary outcomes, the logMAR (WMD = 0.01, 95% CI [-0.06, 0.08]) and the anterior chamber flare (SMD = 0.08, 95% CI [-0.01, 0.18], P = .087; I² = 0%) showed no differences. However, the amount of anterior chamber cells (SMD = -0.21, 95% CI [-0.42, -0.01], P = .044; I² = 0%) in the TA injection on the first day postoperative was higher than for dexamethasone. After treatment, there was no difference between the 2 groups.
CONCLUSIONS
This study supports that there were no differences in IOP, logMAR, and anterior chamber flare between TA injection and dexamethasone among cataract patients. TA injection treatment on the first day showed higher amounts of anterior chamber cells than with dexamethasone.
Topics: Humans; Cataract Extraction; Dexamethasone; Glucocorticoids; Intraocular Pressure; Lens Implantation, Intraocular; Phacoemulsification; Treatment Outcome; Triamcinolone Acetonide
PubMed: 38847669
DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000037584 -
Journal of Ophthalmology 2024To assess the nozzle tip damage and the parameters of three different hydrophilic intraocular lens (IOL) injector models.
PURPOSE
To assess the nozzle tip damage and the parameters of three different hydrophilic intraocular lens (IOL) injector models.
METHODS
After routine cataract surgeries at the University Eye Hospital Heidelberg, all the used IOL injectors were collected from the operating room and sent to our laboratory. Nozzle tip damage was assessed under a microscope and graded as follows: no damage (grade 0), slight scratches (1), deep scratches (2), extensions (3), cracks (4), and bursts (5). Each damage grade was assigned a score from 0 to 5, and the total damage score for each injector system was calculated and compared. Nozzle tip parameters (diameters and areas), plunger tip parameters, and tip angles were also measured in each model.
RESULTS
The damage scores were (median, Q3-Q1): 1 (1-1) for Accuject, 1 (1-1) for Bluemixs, and 1 (1-1) for RayOne. There was no statistically significant difference in the damage scores between the study groups ( > 0.05). The outer cross-sectional vertical and horizontal diameters were 1.69 and 1.69 mm for Accuject, 1.69 and 1.69 mm for Bluemixs, and 1.70 and 1.71 mm for RayOne. Plunger tip areas were 0.78 mm for Accjuect, 0.74 mm for Bluemixs, and 0.43 mm for RayOne. Plunger tip area/inner cross-sectional area of the nozzle tip (%) was 31.2% for RayOne, 66.7% for Accuject, and 63.8% for Bluemixs. The tip angles for three injector models were 56° (Accuject), 56° (Bluemixs), and 44° (RayOne).
CONCLUSIONS
All the injector models showed mild to moderate damage to the nozzle tip after IOL implantation, even with smaller diameter tips. RayOne resulted in the lowest ratio between plunger tip area and inner cross-sectional area of the nozzle tip and a better distribution of damage categories than the other two groups. All three injector models had relatively small tip parameters. If smaller incisions are required in certain patients, smaller tip parameters should be considered.
PubMed: 38846928
DOI: 10.1155/2024/2360368 -
Advances in Ophthalmology Practice and... 2024The convergence of smartphone technology and artificial intelligence (AI) has revolutionized the landscape of ophthalmic care, offering unprecedented opportunities for... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
The convergence of smartphone technology and artificial intelligence (AI) has revolutionized the landscape of ophthalmic care, offering unprecedented opportunities for diagnosis, monitoring, and management of ocular conditions. Nevertheless, there is a lack of systematic studies on discussing the integration of smartphone and AI in this field.
MAIN TEXT
This review includes 52 studies, and explores the integration of smartphones and AI in ophthalmology, delineating its collective impact on screening methodologies, disease detection, telemedicine initiatives, and patient management. The collective findings from the curated studies indicate promising performance of the smartphone-based AI screening for various ocular diseases which encompass major retinal diseases, glaucoma, cataract, visual impairment in children and ocular surface diseases. Moreover, the utilization of smartphone-based imaging modalities, coupled with AI algorithms, is able to provide timely, efficient and cost-effective screening for ocular pathologies. This modality can also facilitate patient self-monitoring, remote patient monitoring and enhancing accessibility to eye care services, particularly in underserved regions. Challenges involving data privacy, algorithm validation, regulatory frameworks and issues of trust are still need to be addressed. Furthermore, evaluation on real-world implementation is imperative as well, and real-world prospective studies are currently lacking.
CONCLUSIONS
Smartphone ocular imaging merged with AI enables earlier, precise diagnoses, personalized treatments, and enhanced service accessibility in eye care. Collaboration is crucial to navigate ethical and data security challenges while responsibly leveraging these innovations, promising a potential revolution in care access and global eye health equity.
PubMed: 38846624
DOI: 10.1016/j.aopr.2024.03.003 -
Acta Medica Philippina 2024The Philippines does not have a national congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) surveillance or registry. Regular monitoring of CRS cases in hospitals, including in a...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
The Philippines does not have a national congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) surveillance or registry. Regular monitoring of CRS cases in hospitals, including in a Philippine tertiary hospital, helped in the past to provide clinico-epidemiologic data on CRS. This study aimed to continue providing clinico-epidemiologic data on CRS cases seen in the Philippine tertiary hospital from 2009-2012 and 2019-2022 and compare the cases seen from said timelines.
METHODS
A cross-sectional study was used, employing chart review of patients newly diagnosed with CRS from 2009-2012 and 2019-2022 in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences at the Philippine tertiary hospital.
RESULTS
Forty-two patients newly diagnosed with CRS from 2009-2012 and 2019-2022 were included. Only 14 (33%) were serologically-confirmed cases (albeit qualitatively). Median age (first and third interquartile ranges) at consult was 1 year (0.4, 2.5). Twenty-four (57%) patients had maternal history of rashes and/or fever. Trimester of pregnancy when mother became symptomatic was not significantly correlated with chief complaint (p=0.20) and numbers of ophthalmic (p=0.68) and systemic manifestations (p=0.32). Cataract was the most common ophthalmic manifestation present in 40 (95%) patients. Twenty-six (62%) patients had other associated systemic findings of which hearing loss was the most common. Only 29 of 40 patients with cataract underwent lensectomy, with 23 patients having poor visual prognosis prior to surgery (5 with nystagmus alone, 10 with nystagmus and strabismus, and 8 with strabismus alone).
DISCUSSION
Using ophthalmic manifestations as primary indicator, this study provided an update on the CRS cases in the country. Laboratory confirmation remains a challenge in diagnosing CRS as the tests are costly and not widely available. There was increase from 2009-2012 compared to 2019-2022 in number of patients who underwent surgical treatment for cataract but visual outcomes were suboptimal due to delay in consultation. Although there was a decrease in number of CRS cases seen in the Philippine tertiary hospital, this cannot be attributed to increased rubella-containing vaccine (RCV) coverage alone.
CONCLUSION
Provision of data from individual hospital-based studies similar to this highlights the need for a national CRS surveillance system or registry. This can better gauge the burden of CRS and identify the gap in RCV coverage.
PubMed: 38846163
DOI: 10.47895/amp.vi0.7357 -
Complementary Therapies in Medicine Aug 2024To evaluate the effectiveness of music therapy in reducing anxiety, pain, and vital sign changes in ophthalmic surgery patients. (Meta-Analysis)
Meta-Analysis
OBJECTIVES
To evaluate the effectiveness of music therapy in reducing anxiety, pain, and vital sign changes in ophthalmic surgery patients.
METHODS
An extensive search of databases, including PubMed, Embase, Cochrane, Web of Science, and Google Scholar, identified relevant studies up to Jan 2024. Selection of studies was conducted based on the PICOS criteria. The quality of methodology was assessed using the Cochrane risk-of-bias assessment tool and Review Manager 5.4. Meta-analysis comparing the control group and the music therapy group was performed using R and Stata/SE 15.1 random or fixed effects model.
RESULTS
This meta-analysis included fifteen studies comprising 2098 participants. The analysis revealed that music therapy significantly reduced the risk of high anxiety levels as measured by Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) (I = 0 %, RR(95 %CI): 0.75(0.63, 0.88), p = 0.0006), indicating a substantial effect without heterogeneity. The Anxiety scores determined by State-Trait Anxiety Inventory-State (STAI-S) also showed a significant decrease (SMD(95 %CI): -0.75(-0.88, -0.61), p < 0.0001), albeit with moderate heterogeneity (I² = 36 %). Additionally, music therapy was associated with a reduction in intraoperative pain levels, with no observed heterogeneity (I = 0 %, SMD(95 %CI): -0.74(-0.93, -0.56), p < 0.0001). In contrast, music intervention did not significantly influence self-reported nervousness, relaxation, or satisfaction levels as determined by VAS. Regarding to physiological parameters, a marginal decrease in systolic blood pressure (SBP) was observed (SMD(95 %CI): -0.42(-0.79, -0.04), p = 0.0286), with considerable heterogeneity (I² = 92 %). Diastolic blood pressure (DBP) experienced a slight reduction (I² = 90 %, SMD(95 %CI): -0.45(-0.79, -0.11), p = 0.0088). However, no significant effect was observed on patients' heart rate (p = 0.0864).
CONCLUSION
Music therapy effectively reduced anxiety and pain, and moderately improved vital signs in patients undergoing ophthalmic surgery, highlighting its role in enhancing patient well-being. Further in-depth RCTs are needed to confirm its efficacy.
Topics: Humans; Anxiety; Blood Pressure; Music Therapy; Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures; Pain Management
PubMed: 38844046
DOI: 10.1016/j.ctim.2024.103062 -
PloS One 2024
PubMed: 38843163
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0305361 -
Ophthalmology Science 2024To describe a pilot study on the use of single-session, high-dose-rate, Food and Drug Administration-cleared, yttrium-90 (Y) plaque brachytherapy for iris and...
PURPOSE
To describe a pilot study on the use of single-session, high-dose-rate, Food and Drug Administration-cleared, yttrium-90 (Y) plaque brachytherapy for iris and iridociliary melanoma.
DESIGN
A single-center, clinical case series.
PARTICIPANTS
Six consecutive patients were included in this study. Each was diagnosed with an iris or iridociliary melanoma based on clinical examination with or without biopsy.
METHODS
Each tumor was staged according to the American Joint Committee on Cancer criteria and received Y eye plaque brachytherapy. The main variables were tumor size, patient age, sex, and method of diagnosis (clinical or biopsy). Surgical techniques, treatment durations, and ocular side effects were recorded. Local control was defined as a lack of tumor growth or regression determined by clinical examinations, including slit-lamp and gonio photography, as well as high-frequency ultrasound measurements. Toxicity parameters included acute and short-term corneal/scleral change, anterior segment inflammation, and cataract progression.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Local and systemic cancer control, tumor regression, visual acuity, as well as radiation-related normal tissue toxicity.
RESULTS
High-dose-rate Y plaque brachytherapy was used to treat small (American Joint Committee on Cancer cT1) category melanomas. Single-surgery high-dose-rate irradiations were performed under anesthesia. Because of short treatment durations, high-dose-rate Y did not require the additional procedures used for low-dose-rate plaque (e.g., sutures, amniotic membrane epicorneal buffering, Gunderson flaps, and second surgeries for plaque removal). Only conjunctival recession was used to avoid normal tissue irradiation. High-dose-rate Y treatment durations averaged 8.8 minutes (median, 7.9; range, 5.8-12.9). High-dose-rate Y brachytherapy was associated with no periorbital, corneal (Descemet folds), or conjunctival edema. There was no acute or short-term anterior uveitis, secondary cataract, scleropathy, radiation retinopathy, maculopathy, or optic neuropathy. The follow-up was a mean of 16.0 (range 12-24) months. Evidence of local control included a lack of expansion of tumor borders ( = 6, 100%), darkening with or without atrophy of the tumor surface ( = 5/6, 83%), and a mean 24.5% reduction in ultrasonographically measured tumor thickness. There were no cases of metastatic disease.
CONCLUSIONS
High-dose-rate Y brachytherapy allowed for single-surgery, minimally invasive, outpatient irradiation of iris and iridociliary melanomas.
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES
Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article.
PubMed: 38840779
DOI: 10.1016/j.xops.2024.100513 -
The British Journal of Ophthalmology Jun 2024The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate digital ray, based on preoperative and postoperative image pairs using style transfer generative adversarial networks...
BACKGROUND/AIMS
The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate digital ray, based on preoperative and postoperative image pairs using style transfer generative adversarial networks (GANs), to enhance cataractous fundus images for improved retinopathy detection.
METHODS
For eligible cataract patients, preoperative and postoperative colour fundus photographs (CFP) and ultra-wide field (UWF) images were captured. Then, both the original CycleGAN and a modified CycleGAN (CycleGAN) framework were adopted for image generation and quantitatively compared using Frechet Inception Distance (FID) and Kernel Inception Distance (KID). Additionally, CFP and UWF images from another cataract cohort were used to test model performances. Different panels of ophthalmologists evaluated the quality, authenticity and diagnostic efficacy of the generated images.
RESULTS
A total of 959 CFP and 1009 UWF image pairs were included in model development. FID and KID indicated that images generated by CycleGAN presented significantly improved quality. Based on ophthalmologists' average ratings, the percentages of inadequate-quality images decreased from 32% to 18.8% for CFP, and from 18.7% to 14.7% for UWF. Only 24.8% and 13.8% of generated CFP and UWF images could be recognised as synthetic. The accuracy of retinopathy detection significantly increased from 78% to 91% for CFP and from 91% to 93% for UWF. For retinopathy subtype diagnosis, the accuracies also increased from 87%-94% to 91%-100% for CFP and from 87%-95% to 93%-97% for UWF.
CONCLUSION
Digital ray could generate realistic postoperative CFP and UWF images with enhanced quality and accuracy for overall detection and subtype diagnosis of retinopathies, especially for CFP.\ TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: This study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05491798).
PubMed: 38839251
DOI: 10.1136/bjo-2024-325403 -
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of... Jun 2024Age-related cataract is the most frequent cause of blindness in the world being responsible for 48% of blindness and affecting more than 10% of the working population....
Age-related cataract is the most frequent cause of blindness in the world being responsible for 48% of blindness and affecting more than 10% of the working population. Currently there is no objective data of the lens biomechanical properties so the process by which the cataract affects the lens's properties (e.g. hardness and elasticity) is still unclear. A modified animal model was produced to create different severities of nuclear cataract. Different doses of sodium selenite were injected in two different moments of the rat' eyes maturation resulting in 12, 13 and 11 rats with incipient, moderate and severe cataract, respectively. The nucleus and cortex's hardness and the stiffness were measured using NanoTest™. Statistically significant differences were found between healthy and cataractous lenses. Statistically significant differences were also found between the different nuclear cataract degrees (p = 0.016), showing that the lens' hardness increases with cataract formation. The nucleus shows a higher hardness increase with cataract formation (p = 0.049). The animal model used in this study allowed for the first time the characterization of the lens's hardness and elasticity in two regions of the lens, in healthy and cataractous lenses.
PubMed: 38838543
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2024.106610 -
Clinical Ophthalmology (Auckland, N.Z.) 2024Blue light-filtering (BLF) intraocular lenses (IOLs) are designed to mimic the healthy natural adult crystalline lens. Studies that evaluated the relative merit of... (Review)
Review
Blue light-filtering (BLF) intraocular lenses (IOLs) are designed to mimic the healthy natural adult crystalline lens. Studies that evaluated the relative merit of ultraviolet-only IOL design (ie, blocking wavelengths <400 nm) versus BLF IOL design (ie, filtering wavelengths ~400-475 nm in addition to blocking wavelengths <400 nm) on protection and function of the visual system suggest that neither design had a deleterious impact on visual acuity or contrast sensitivity. A BLF design may reduce some aspects of glare, such as veiling and photostress. BLF has been shown in many contexts to improve visual performance under conditions that are stressed by blue light, such as distance vision impaired by short-wave dominant haze. Furthermore, some data (mostly inferential) support the notion that BLF IOLs reduce actinic stress. Biomimetic BLF IOLs represent a conservative approach to IOL design that provides no harm for visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, or color vision while improving vision under certain circumstances (eg, glare).
PubMed: 38835885
DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S448426