High incidence of sympathetic ophthalmia after contact and noncontact neodymium:YAG cyclotherapy
- PMID: 1480397
- DOI: 10.1016/s0161-6420(92)31719-1
High incidence of sympathetic ophthalmia after contact and noncontact neodymium:YAG cyclotherapy
Abstract
Background: Two cases of sympathetic ophthalmia occurring after noncontact neodymium:YAG (Nd:YAG) cyclotherapy have previously been reported. In each case, the patient had undergone filtering surgery in the exciting eye. Although in each case Nd:YAG cyclotherapy was the last surgery performed, the inciting event of sympathetic ophthalmia was unclear.
Methods: The authors studied three additional patients who developed sympathetic ophthalmia after Nd:YAG cyclotherapy for glaucoma.
Results: Two patients developed sympathetic ophthalmia 4 months after noncontact Nd:YAG cyclotherapy, and 1 patient developed sympathetic ophthalmia 18 months after contact Nd:YAG cyclotherapy. All patients had previous cataract extractions but no filtering surgery in the exciting eye. Clinical features included chronic iridocyclitis, choroidal folds, Dalen-Fuchs nodules, and optic disc edema. Combining these cases with the two previously reported cases, the incidence of sympathetic ophthalmia at our institution thus far is 5.8% (4 of 69) and 0.67% (1 of 150) after noncontact and contact Nd:YAG cyclotherapy, respectively.
Conclusions: The incidence of sympathetic ophthalmia after Nd:YAG cyclotherapy is high compared with other ocular procedures. The clinician should vigilantly monitor patients after Nd:YAG cyclotherapy and report additional cases that may have occurred at other institutions.
Comment in
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Sympathetic ophthalmia after Nd:YAG cyclotherapy.Ophthalmology. 1993 Jun;100(6):798-9. doi: 10.1016/s0161-6420(93)31570-8. Ophthalmology. 1993. PMID: 8510890 No abstract available.
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