A 35-year-old pregnant Caucasian woman at 27 weeks gestation presented with sudden onset painless loss of vision and a large floater in her left eye while doing yoga. She was found to have a dense vitreous haemorrhage with a small preretinal haemorrhage. Ultrasound imaging confirmed the haemorrhage and showed no other retinal damage. She was diagnosed with valsalva haemorrhagic retinopathy and was treated conservatively. After 5 months of follow-up, this woman had had a normal delivery and her haemorrhages and vision loss had resolved.
The purpose of this report is to describe the case and management of an unexplained vitreous haemorrhage that occurred after repeated roller-coaster riding. The authors inadvertently demonstrate the value of observation over immediate surgery in certain situations and review the literature on vitreoretinal and other ocular complications after roller-coaster riding. A 26-year-old male presented 12 h after riding high-velocity roller-coasters with a left vitreous haemorrhage. A hazy view of the retina and B-scan revealed a bullous area of superior-temporal retinal lifting. A diagnosis of a presumed macula-on retinal detachment was made and the patient was listed for a pars plana vitrectomy retinal detachment repair. An abnormal clotting result, which was subsequently found out to be erroneous, ultimately delayed the procedure. During this delay the vision and retinal view improved to an extent whereby the diagnosis of a retinoschisis with an intraretinal cyst was made and surgery was avoided. The patient regained 6/6 vision, without the need to undergo surgery. Historically the management of an unexplained vitreous haemorrhage was observation with serial B-scans. The current evidence and practice for treating unexplained vitreous haemorrhage have since moved towards early surgical intervention. The authors highlight that despite the current trend, a place remains for conservative management for selected cases.
AIM: To determine whether the different diameters of a specific intraocular lens (IOL) have significantly different optimized SRK/T A constants and whether these new A constants can improve refractive outcomes.
METHODS: Data were collected prospectively from Jan. 2011 to Dec. 2012 on all patients undergoing routine cataract surgery at a district general hospital in the UK. Patients were divided into three groups according to the size of the Akreos AO MI60 IOL used. A constants for the SRK/T formula were optimized according to the size of the IOL. These optimized A constants were then used to select future refractive outcomes.
RESULTS: A total of 2398 cataract operations were performed during the study period of which 1131 met the inclusion criteria. The three optimized A constants for the different sized IOLs were 118.98, 119.13, 119.32. The difference between them was highly significant (P≤0.0001). Two optimized A constants for three sizes of IOL led to an improvement in refractive outcomes (from 93.4% to 94.6% of refractive outcomes within 1.00 D of predicted spherical equivalent). The optimized A constant for the largest IOL was based on a small number of cases and was not used.
CONCLUSION: Optimizing the A constant for the three distinct sizes of the Bausch & Lomb Akreos MI60 lens lead to three significantly different A constants. In our practice, using two different optimized A constants for three different sized IOLs give the least refractive error, however, using three optimized A constants may give better results with a larger dataset.
A pproximately 284 million people worldwide are blind or have low vision. The majority, 90%, live in developing countries where uncorrected refractive errors and cataracts are the most common causes. In the UK, nearly 2 million people live with sight loss, the majority as a consequence of age-related macular degeneration. Visual impairment is more common among the elderly, and so with the ageing of our population, the number of people with sight loss in the UK is set to increase dramatically in the future. Blindness and low vision have a significant impact on individuals' independence, activities of daily living and finance. The GP must be familiar with blindness and partial sightedness, its registration process and be able to facilitate access to support for patients. Definition of blindness The Department of Health divides visual impairment into two groups: O Sight impaired (SI-formerly partially sighted) and O Severely sight impaired (SSI-formerly blind)
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