15 research outputs found

    Immunohistochemical characterization of a retinal hamartoma

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    status: publishe

    Chronic blepharitis

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    status: publishe

    Choroidal Paraganglioma with Metastases to the Fellow Eye

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    Purpose: To report a case of a paraganglioma in the right eye with metastatic disease in the fellow eye 3 years later. Methods: A 70-year-old man presented with a painful amblyopic right eye; rubeosis iridis and a large choroidal tumor were found. The tumor was treated by enucleation. Pathology diagnosed the tumor as a paraganglioma. Screening for other tumors or metastatic disease was negative at that moment. After 3 years, a paraganglioma skin metastasis was detected, and screening revealed metastatic disease in the liver. Another 6 months later he was referred for tumors in the left eye, which were treated by radiotherapy. He succumbed 6 months later. Results: Histopathology of the right eye revealed the typical image of a paraganglioma, with expression of synaptophysin, neuron-specific enolase and chromogranin. S-100 staining was positive in the sustentacular cells; staining for HMB-45, SME, EMA and pan-keratin was negative. Microscopy of the tumors in the skin and liver 3 years later showed a dedifferentiated tumor with the same immunological characteristics, but with higher Ki67 expression and more mitoses. Conclusions: This report documents a very rare choroidal paraganglioma which presented clinically as a melanoma. The patient succumbed 4 years later to generalized metastatic disease. No other primary paraganglioma was found; however, paraganglion cells in the eye have never been described

    The Conjunctiva in Normal Tension Glaucoma Patients is Thinner Than in Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma Patients: A Comparative Histologic Study

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    PURPOSE: To compare histologically the thickness of conjunctival specimens of normal tension glaucoma (NTG) patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this prospective study, 54 patients scheduled for trabeculectomy were categorized into NTG and POAG based on their maximum untreated intraocular pressure at any time (IOPmax) as measured by Goldmann applanation tonometry. Sixteen patients with NTG (IOPmax≤21 mm Hg) and 36 patients with high tension POAG (IOPmax>21 mm Hg) were included in the study. Biopsies were taken from the superior bulbar conjunctiva during trabeculectomy. The specimens were fixed in formalin, embedded in methacrylate, histologically sectioned, stained with toluidine blue, and analyzed with a light microscope. The stromal conjunctival thickness (CT) was measured in a standardized way and compared between the 2 groups. Intergroup comparisons were performed using the Mann-Whitney U test for continuous variables and the Fisher exact test for categorical variables. The correlation between the central cornea thickness (CCT) and the CT was investigated by the Spearman test. RESULTS: The stromal CT was significantly thinner in NTG compared with POAG (64±31 vs. 103±44 µm, respectively; P=0.002). Stromal CT of the whole group was positively correlated with IOPmax (r=0.41; P=0.002; 95% confidence interval, 0.15-0.62) but not with central cornea thickness (r=-0.005; P=0.97; 95% confidence interval, -0.28 to 0.27). CONCLUSIONS: The conjunctiva in patients with NTG was thinner than in POAG patients. This finding is an additional feature in the pattern of thinner ocular structures in patients with NTG.status: publishe

    Sub‐inner limiting membrane haemorrhage: causes and treatment with vitrectomy

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    Background: Preretinal haemorrhages usually occur at the interface between the posterior hyaloid and inner limiting membrane (ILM). Less frequently, they are located between the ILM and the retinal nerve fibre layer. Sub-ILM haemorrhages have been described in a variety of clinical settings and often lead to severe visual impairment because of their predilection for the macular region. Methods: A consecutive series of five cases in which sub-ILM haemorrhages were clinically suspected and confirmed during early vitrectomy with ILM peeling were reviewed. Results: Sub-ILM haemorrhages were clinically suspected in five patients (median age 32 years) based on the fundoscopic appearance and clinical setting of Terson's syndrome (n = 1), Valsalva retinopathy (n = 2), blood dyscrasia (n = 1) and blunt facial trauma (n = 1). Vision was severely impaired in all patients (to hand movements in four of five) because of a premacular location of the haemorrhage. All patients were treated with early pars plana vitrectomy because of insufficient spontaneous visual recovery after a median of 6 weeks. The sub-ILM location of the haemorrhage could be confirmed intraoperatively in all patients by biostaining of the membrane overlying the haemorrhage. ILM peeling and aspiration of the haemorrhage resulted in excellent visual recovery in all patients. No procedure-related complications were observed. Conclusions: Sub-ILM haemorrhages often occur in a specific clinical-context and can lead to severe visual impairment in young patients. Given the excellent results and low complication rates, timely surgical intervention is justified when spontaneous resorption is insufficient.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Primary vitreous cysts.

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    Objective: To report two cases of vitreous cysts with discussion of their pathophysiology and management. Methods: Clinical examination with fundus photography, ultrasound and optical coherence tomography. Histopathology was performed in the first case. Results: The first case illustrates a pigmented, free-floating cyst, which was removed during a 27-gauge vitrectomy. The histopathology shows a single layer of pigmented epithelium and confirms the previously reported presence of a PAS-positive basement membrane. The second case shows a sessile, non-pigmented cyst associated with significant anisometropia. Conclusion: Primary vitreous cysts are rare and can have a wide range in their clinical aspect. This likely reflects whether they originate either from the pigment epithelium or the primary hyaloidal system. The management of vitreous cysts is mostly conservative, but pars plana vitrectomy can be used safely if the symptoms are debilitating.status: Published onlin
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