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Aqueous Angiographic Outflow Improvement after Trabecular Microbypass in Glaucoma Patients
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ogla.2018.11.010Abstract
Purpose
To study changes in aqueous humor outflow (AHO) patterns after trabecular micro-bypass (TMB) in glaucoma patients using intraoperative sequential aqueous angiography.Design
Prospective comparative case series.Subjects
Fifteen subjects (14 with glaucoma and 1 normal).Methods
Sequential aqueous angiography (Spectralis HRA+OCT; Heidelberg Engineering) was performed on fourteen glaucoma patients undergoing routine TMB (iStent Inject; Glaukos Corporation) and cataract surgery and one normal patient undergoing cataract surgery alone. Indocyanine green (ICG) aqueous angiography established initial baseline nasal angiographic AHO patterns. Two TMB stents were placed in regions of baseline low or high angiographic AHO in each eye (n = 2 eyes with enough space to place two stents in both low angiographic regions; n = 8 eyes with two stents both placed in high angiographic regions; n = 4 eyes with enough space to place one stent in a low angiographic region and the other stent in a high angiographic region). Subsequent fluorescein aqueous angiography was utilized to query alterations to angiographic AHO patterns.Main outcome measure
Angiographic signal and patterns before and after TMB.Results
At baseline, all eyes showed segmental angiographic AHO patterns. Focused on the nasal hemisphere of each eye, for each stent TMB in initially low ICG angiographic signal regions showed transient or persistently improved fluorescein angiographic signal (11.2-fold; p = 0.014). TMB in initially high ICG signal regions led to faster development of fluorescein angiographic patterns (3.1-fold; p = 0.02).Conclusion
TMB resulted in different patterns of aqueous angiographic AHO improvement whose further understanding may advance basic knowledge of AHO and possibly enhance intraocular pressure reduction after glaucoma surgery in the future.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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