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2006
DOI: 10.1016/s0181-5512(06)73782-2
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Sclérectomie profonde non perforante dans le traitement du glaucome uvéitique

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Cited by 33 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…2,9-11 For TRAB, our surgical success rate of 89% at 12 months is comparable with the rates reported by Ceballos 1 or Towler 2 for uveitic glaucomas. This rate is slightly lower than the 90% obtained at 2 years by Ambresin 15 after TRAB in non-uveitic glaucoma, but our 88% success rate for DS is not different from the 88% reported at 12 months by Souissi,17 and is only slightly lower than that reported by Auer 9 (90% at 1 year, in a cohort of 14 eyes). As expected, this success rate for DS is also lower than the one obtained for non-uveitic glaucomas by Shaarawy 18 (100% at 48 months).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 69%
“…2,9-11 For TRAB, our surgical success rate of 89% at 12 months is comparable with the rates reported by Ceballos 1 or Towler 2 for uveitic glaucomas. This rate is slightly lower than the 90% obtained at 2 years by Ambresin 15 after TRAB in non-uveitic glaucoma, but our 88% success rate for DS is not different from the 88% reported at 12 months by Souissi,17 and is only slightly lower than that reported by Auer 9 (90% at 1 year, in a cohort of 14 eyes). As expected, this success rate for DS is also lower than the one obtained for non-uveitic glaucomas by Shaarawy 18 (100% at 48 months).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 69%
“…In this study, the probability of unqualified success was 85.7% and 71.4%, respectively, at 1 year for DS. This value is comparable to those reported by Al Obeidan and colleagues 10 (72.7% for <23 mmHg), Dupas and colleagues 17 (88%), Souissi and colleagues 27 (88%) and Auer and colleagues 28 (90%) in UG. It was lower than the value reported by Shaarawy and Mermoud 29 (100%) but comparable to that of Kozobolis and colleagues 22 (50%–95%), both of which report nonuveitic cases.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Overall success rates (complete and qualified success) range from 87% to 100%. A favourable aspect of this technique is that complications (in these cases, lens opacities, reversible hypotony, hyphema and bleb encapsulation) occur infrequently [1618]. We used a slightly modified standard deep sclerectomy to obtain a conventional transscleral deep filtration and combined it with circumscribed goniotomies to increase the filtration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patients were aged 56.9 and 48.1 years, respectively. In the deep sclerectomy group, the procedure was successful in 88% of the patients, compared to 65% in the trabeculectomy group with a follow-up of 42 and 52 months [18, 20]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%