primary involvement of the orbit by a leiomyosarcoma is rare, but this eventuality should be considered in the differential diagnosis of rapidly growing orbital and conjunctival masses.
Doubts still exist concerning the mechanisms involved in ocular ischemic syndrome (OIS) and its dependence on carotid disease. We report findings from 14 surgical patients undergoing carotid artery reconstruction for symptomatic cerebrovascular disease. All of them had fluorescein angiography (FA) of the eye ipsilateral to the carotid operation before surgery and 3 months after to provide information regarding retinal circulation time. Before the surgical procedure, the mean circulation time was 29.4 ± 9.4 seconds (CI 95%: 24.5-34.3). After 3 months, a significant (P < .001) decrease in the circulation time was observed: 18.9 ± 8.4 seconds (CI 95%: 14.5-23.4). The present series demonstrates that carotid revascularization surgery improved retinal flow in approximately 80% of the patients.
Acute anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION) is a disabling disease which impairs visual function. Standard treatment is unable to affect the outcome and the visual damage persists. We describe the case of a 64-year-old patient affected by AION, whose only known risk factor was hypercholesterolemia. After a first onset of involvement of the right eye (RE), the patient presented four weeks later with an analogous episode affecting the left eye (LE). Since standard treatment, started at involvement of the RE, had not yielded any beneficial effect, the patient underwent three sessions of LDL apheresis. The scotomatous portion of the visual field reduced even after the first session, there was further improvement after the third, and after six months the condition remained stable. Corrected vision improved from 2/10 to 6/10 after the third session. LDL cholesterol and fibrinogen decresade after the third session from 239 mg/dL to 31 mg/dL and from 289 mg/dL to 92 mg/dL, respectively. In conclusion, thanks to its effect of antagonizing hemorheologic disorders of the ocular microcirculation, LDL apheresis seems to be an efficacious treatment of AION, especially in patients suffering from hypercholesterolemia.
Nonarteritic acute anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION) is a disabling disease which impairs visual function. It is presumed to result from disturbances of microcirculation in the anterior portion of the optic nerve head due to hemodynamic factors derived from excessive blood viscosity, or restriction of the vasal lumen in hypertensive, hypercholesterolemic, diabetic patients. We aimed to determine whether acute reduction of plasma fibrinogen and serum low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol is effective for treatment of NAION. We recruited 11 patients (7 females, 4 males) with a mean age of 57.2 +/- 19.6 years. All except one of them presented risk factors for atherosclerosis. The mean values of LDL-cholesterol and fibrinogen before treatment were 144 +/- 32 mg/dL and 341 +/- 80 mg/dL, respectively. All were treated with standard therapy (prednisone, salicylate, pentoxiphyllin) and underwent three sessions of LDL-apheresis (HELP system-B Braun) that can reduce plasma LDL-cholesterol and fibrinogen by more than 50% in a very short time. In all patients we observed a drastic reduction of LDL cholesterol and fibrinogen and a clear improvement in the visual functional data. In fact, mean values of corrected vision increased from 3.7/10 +/- 3/10 to 7.9/10 +/- 2.2/10 (P = 0.002) after the third session, while the scotomatous portion of the visual field regressed after the first session, and in 5 patients further regressed after the third session. This improvement had remained stable after 3 months. Thanks to it's effect of antagonizing hemorheologic disorders of the ocular microcirculation, fibrinogen/LDL-apheresis seems to be an efficacious treatment of NAION.
Endothelial dysfunction of the optic microcirculation is considered to be the main pathogenetic mechanism in nonarteritic ischemic optic neuropathy. The aim of the present work was to assess whether a clinical improvement is correlated with a reduction in the endothelial activation markers by means of LDL apheresis (LDLA). Three weekly sessions of LDLA were administered in 23 patients affected by nonarteritic ischemic optic neuropathy. Statistically significant reductions were achieved in all parameters: total cholesterol (44.6%), LDL cholesterol (54.6%), fibrinogen (60.9%), von Willebrand factor (38.6%), sE-Selectin (22.6%), sICAM-1 (14%) and sVCAM-1 (15.5%), each of which was correlated with an improvement in the mean deviation of the visual field, although statistical significance for the single parameters was not reached. However, analysis of variance between the mean deviation improvement and the set of parameters taken together yielded highly significant results (p < 0.0001). LDLA was effective in reducing the values of all evaluated endothelial activation markers, and this trend was correlated with an improvement in the visual field.
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