Macular Degeneration: Kim BY

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Macular Degeneration," originating from Planet Earth —» Kim BY.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Review Appositional suprachoroidal hemorrhage: a case-control study. 2004

Moshfeghi DM, Kim BY, Kaiser PK, Sears JE, Smith SD. · Stanford University Department of Ophthalmology, Stanford, California, USA. · Am J Ophthalmol. · Pubmed #15629286 No free full text.

Abstract: PURPOSE: To identify the risk factors, prognostic factors, and clinical outcomes of patients with perioperative appositional suprachoroidal hemorrhage (ASCH). DESIGN: Case-control study. SETTING: Tertiary referral center. METHODS: Subjects included all patients with perioperative ASCH documented by B-scan ultrasound between May 1990 and March 2001. Two or three control patients were selected for each case, matched by surgeon, procedure, and date of surgery within 1 month. Surgery was performed as necessary. main outcome measures. The odds of ASCH associated with clinical risk factors. secondary outcome measure: visual acuity. RESULTS: Thirty-seven cases with ASCH were identified. Ninety-two procedure- and surgeon-matched control subjects (2.48:1) were selected. Twenty-six cases (71%) of ASCH were related to a glaucoma operation. Risk factors for the development of ASCH included previous vitrectomy (P = .003, odds ratio of 12) and older age (P = .007, odds ratio 1.57/decade of increasing age). Hypertension was found to be protective (P = .02, odds ratio of 0.33). Factors associated with a poor visual outcome in patients with ASCH included apposition >30 days (P = .01), history of uveitis (P = .04), history of dry age-related macular degeneration (P = .05), and history of extracapsular cataract extraction (P = .05). Median pre-ASCH visual acuity was 20/100, and final median visual acuity was 20/1600. CONCLUSIONS: Risk factors for the development of ASCH include previous vitrectomy and older age. Patients with these risk factors should be informed of their greater chance of poor visual acuity and anatomic outcomes secondary to the development of ASCH.

2 Article Optical coherence tomographic patterns of diabetic macular edema. 2006

Kim BY, Smith SD, Kaiser PK. · Cole Eye Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. · Am J Ophthalmol. · Pubmed #16935584 No free full text.

Abstract: PURPOSE: To describe various morphologic patterns of diabetic macular edema (DME) demonstrated by optical coherence tomography (OCT) and correlate them with visual acuity. DESIGN: Retrospective, observational, case series. METHODS: A retrospective review of all patients with DME who underwent OCT evaluation and met the study inclusion criteria between May 1998 and December 2002 at the Cole Eye Institute was performed. The OCT scans were evaluated for the presence of diffuse retinal thickening (DRT), cystoid macular edema (CME), posterior hyaloidal traction (PHT), serous retinal detachment (SRD), and traction retinal detachment (TRD). Additionally, the retinal thickness was measured and visual acuity evaluated. RESULTS: Two hundred seventy-six OCT scans of 164 eyes of 119 patients were identified. OCT revealed five morphologic patterns of DME: DRT (269, 97%), CME (152, 55%), SRD without PHT (19, 7.0%), PHT without TRD (35, 12.7%), and PHT with TRD (8, 2.9%). Mean retinal thickness varied depending on the morphologic pattern. The mean visual acuities (Snellen equivalent) also varied between groups. Increasing retinal thickness in all patterns was significantly correlated with worse visual acuity (P < .005). The OCT patterns containing CME (P = .01) and PHT without TRD (P = .02) were also significantly associated with worse vision. CONCLUSIONS: DME exhibits at least five different morphologic patterns on OCT. There is a significant correlation between retinal thickness and visual acuity.