Introduction: The risks of pregnancy in women of advanced maternal age are not consensual amongst studies. The aim of this metaanalysis was to determine whether women of advanced maternal age (≥ 35 years old) had worse obstetrical and perinatal outcomes than non- advanced maternal age women (20 - 34 years old) in singleton, naturally-conceived pregnancies.Material and Methods: We searched PubMed/ MEDLINE, IndexRMP and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Ten studies were included according to the following criteria: population of > 1000 nulliparous and/or multiparous women with singleton gestations who did not undergo any type of infertility treatment. Using Review Manager v. 5.3, two meta-analysis were performed: one comparing the outcomes of 20 - 34-year-old vs 35 - 40-year-old women, and another comparing the outcomes of 35 - 40-year-old women vs > 40-year-old women.Results: Women aged 35 - 40 years old were more likely to have > 12 years of education than 20 - 34 years old and > 40 years old women. Advanced maternal age women (35 - 40 and > 40 years old) were more likely to be overweight and having gestational diabetes and gestational hypertension. They were also more likely to undergo induced labour and elective caesarean deliveries. Furthermore, they had worse perinatal outcomes such as preterm delivery, low birthweight babies, higher rates of Neonatal Intensive Care Unit admission and worse Apgar scores. Advanced maternal age women had higher rates of perinatal mortality and stillbirth.Discussion: Most authors present similar results to our study. Although the majority of adverse outcomes can be explained through the physio-pathological changes regarding the female reproductive apparatus that come with aging and its inherent comorbidities, according to the existing literature advanced maternal age can be an independent risk factor per se. In older pregnant women without comorbidities such as gestational hypertension or diabetes there are still worse obstetric and perinatal outcomes, which indicate that advanced maternal age is an independent strong risk factor alone.Conclusion: Advanced maternal age women are at a higher risk of adverse obstetrical and perinatal outcomes. In both comparisons, worse outcomes were more prevalent in the older group, suggesting that poorer outcomes are more prevalent with increasing age.
The purpose of this study was to compare the clinical outcomes of 13 patients with optic disc pit maculopathy (ODP-M) – progressive visual loss, serous macular detachment, and/or intraretinal fluid – who underwent different surgical approaches. This was a retrospective study including a consecutive sample of 13 patients aged 13–74 years (mean 35.38 ± 19.66 years) diagnosed with ODP-M and submitted to vitreoretinal surgery between 2005 and 2021. All patients underwent pars plana vitrectomy, posterior hyaloid detachment, and gas tamponade. Endolaser photocoagulation was applied to the temporal margin of the optic disc in 8 cases; internal limiting membrane (ILM) peeling was performed in 9 cases; and ILM inverted flap technique in 5 cases. Stuffing of the pit with an ILM flap was performed in 3 cases. Mean best-corrected visual acuity improved from 20/200 (1.04 ± 0.56 LogMAR) to 20/50 (0.43 ± 0.54 LogMAR) within 4–36 months. Central retinal thickness decreased from 587.5 ± 158.01 μm to 253.9 ± 33.55 μm, and 7 out of 10 patients had complete resolution of intraretinal fluid. All patients had complete retinal reattachment; however, a few years after surgery, 4 patients had recurrence of serous retinal detachment. The only adjunctive technique associated with greater visual improvement was endolaser (<i>p</i> = 0.033) and not performing peeling of the ILM was also associated with better visual results (<i>p</i> = 0.013), independently of preoperative visual acuity or age at the time of surgery. None of the adjunctive procedures was a significant predictor of better anatomical outcomes. In conclusion, all of these approaches for the surgical management of ODP-M were safe and effective. In this study, vitrectomy with endolaser was a good option for management of ODP-M.
Objective To assess the possible correlation between patients’ personality traits and subjective perception of quality of vision (QoV), after multifocal intraocular lens (mIOL) implantation. Methods patients who had bilateral implantation of a non-diffractive X-WAVE or a trifocal lens were assessed 6 months postoperatively. Patients answered the NEO-Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI-20) questionnaire (“Big Five five-factor personality model”) to examine their personality. Six months following surgery, patients were asked to fill a QoV questionnaire where they graded the frequency of 10 common visual symptoms. Primary outcomes were to evaluate the correlation between personality scores and the reported frequency of visual disturbances. Results The study comprised 20 patients submitted to bilateral cataract surgery, 10 with a non-diffractive X-WAVE lens (AcrySof® IQ Vivity) and 10 with a trifocal lens (AcrySof® IQ PanOptix). Mean age was 60.23 (7.06) years. Six months following surgery, patients with lower scores of conscientiousness and extroversion reported a higher frequency of visual disturbances (blurred vision, P = .015 and P = .009, seeing double images P = .018 and P = .006, and having difficulties focusing, P = .027 and P = .022, respectively). In addition, patients with high neuroticism scores had more difficulty focusing ( P = .033). Conclusions In this study, personality traits such as low conscientiousness and extroversion and high neuroticism significantly influenced QoV perception 6 months after bilateral multifocal lens implantation. Patients’ personality questionnaires could be a useful preoperative assessment test to a mIOL.
Objective To compare cross-linking (CXL) plus topography-guided photorefractive keratectomy (t-PRK) and intrastromal corneal ring segments (ICRS) in keratoconus patients, at 12 months of follow-up. Methods This was a longitudinal, retrospective multi-center study. We included a referred sample of 154 eyes from 149 patients with grade I-III Amsler-Krümeich keratoconus with insufficient corrected-distance visual acuity (CDVA). In group 1 (CXL plus t-PRK, 87 eyes), another possible indication for surgery was evidence of progression. Group 2 (ICRS, 67 eyes) included only eyes with paracentral keratoconus (thinnest point at the inferotemporal quadrant) with coincident axes, and evidence of stabilization was required. A subgroup analysis was performed regarding the disease topographic phenotype. At 12 months postoperatively, visual, refractive, and topographic outcomes were evaluated. Results Comparison of the outcomes between CXL plus t-PRK (group 1) and ICRS (group 2) showed similar improvements in CDVA (in group 1, CDVA improved 0.18 logMAR, and in group 2 0.12 logMAR, P = .18) and K2 (−2,45 [6.46] D in group 1 and −2.13 [1.67] D in group 2, P = .34) The improvement in cylinder power was greater in group 2 (−2.37 [2.07] D in group 2 versus −1.18 [2.63] D in group 1, P = .003); group 1 had a higher decrease in Kmax (- 3.26 [3.64] versus—1.74 [2.67], P = .001). Conclusions Both CXL plus t-PRK and ICRS were equally effective in improving CDVA and topographic parameters in a similar group of keratoconus patients at 12 months.
At the age of 43 years-old, a man was left with bilateral limbal stem cell deficiency after an ocular alkaline burn with lime, which resulted in corneal opacification. After multiple unsuccessful surgical attempts to restore vision, including penetrating keratoplasties and Boston keratoprosthesis, visual acuity was counting fingers in the left eye. At 73 years of age, the patient underwent another surgery in his left eye. Cauterization of neovessels and removal of the vascular pannus were followed by partial excision of Tenon’s capsule. Penetrating keratoplasty was followed by an intrastromal injection of anti-VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor), and the ocular surface was covered with amniotic membrane. Postoperatively, the graft was clear with no signs of inflammation; vision improved to 20/50 and remained stable throughout the following two years. Herein we describe some adjunctive procedures that might have delayed failure and rejection of the corneal graft. This case demonstrates the difficulties in treating bilateral limbal stem cell deficiency in a tertiary eye care center with no capacity to perform stem cell therapy.
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