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Perfluoropropane gas, modified panretinal photocoagulation, and vitrectomy in the management of severe proliferative vitreoretinopathy
Fisher YL; Shakin JL; Slakter JS; Sorenson JA; Shafer DM
Seventy-six consecutive patients with total rhegmatogenous retinal detachments and severe proliferative vitreoretinopathy underwent combined pars plana vitrectomy, lensectomy, panretinal photocoagulation, perfluoropropane gas (C3F8)/fluid exchange, and scleral buckling. Sixty-two (82%) of the patients had successful, sustained (greater than 12 months) posterior retinal reattachments at last examination. Of these 62 patients, 40 (65%) had complete retinal attachment, with no evidence of regrowth of periretinal membranes or redetachments following the initial procedure. In the remaining 22 cases with successful reattachment of the retina posterior to the equator, partial peripheral retinal detachments were observed. In 16 of the 22 cases, the detachments occurred entirely anterior to the boundary of the previously placed photocoagulation lesions. The posterior retina remained uninvolved, and no further treatment was needed. Reoperation was required in the other six patients to achieve sustained posterior retinal reattachment. Postoperative visual acuity ranged from 20/40 to bare light perception, with 69% of the anatomically successful cases obtaining functional visual acuity (greater than 20/400). Failures were related to reproliferation of fibrous membranes
PMID: 3415550
ISSN: 0003-9950
CID: 24593
Bilateral perifoveal ischemia associated with chronic granulocytic leukemia. Case report [Case Report]
Minnella AM; Yannuzzi LA; Slakter JS; Rodriquez A
PMID: 3166372
ISSN: 0003-9950
CID: 24594
Horner's syndrome in temporal arteritis [Letter]
Bromfield EB; Slakter JS
PMID: 3369965
ISSN: 0003-9942
CID: 24595
Metastatic colloid carcinoma versus primary carcinoma of the ciliary epithelium [Case Report]
Jakobiec FA; Zimmerman LE; Spencer WH; Slakter JS; Krebs W
Ocular metastases developed from breast carcinomas in two women 7 and 19 years after their mastectomies. They were both ciliary body metastases that had eroded through the root of the iris to present as unifocal globular, gelatinous (colloid) masses in the anterior chamber, and were amenable to local surgery. Histopathologically, small cellular clusters were widely separated in a sea of mucin; the tumor cells failed to display marked pleomorphism or mitotic activity. In each case, the distinction from a primary mucinous ciliary epithelial neoplasm had to be made both clinically and pathologically. For comparison, the authors also report a unique primary ciliary carcinoma that caused intractable glaucoma by spreading diffusely throughout the iris, ciliary body, and anterior chamber angle, and that necessitated enucleation. The tumor cells failed to produce hyaluronic acid but elaborated a mucosubstance which was histochemically indistinguishable from that of the metastatic carcinomas. This primary neoplasm, however, exhibited the following histologic differences from the metastases: more architectural variability, including garlands and festoons of cells not forming lumens that were suspended in a mucinous matrix; much more abundant intracellular mucin; foci of sheet-like and pleomorphic cellular proliferations with mitotic activity; and partial replacement of the ciliary processes by a comparatively benign-appearing mucinous columnar epithelium
PMID: 2825094
ISSN: 0161-6420
CID: 24596
MACULA PHOTOCOAGULATION LENS [Meeting Abstract]
YANNUZZI, LA; SLAKTER, JS
ISI:A1987G499000114
ISSN: 0165-5701
CID: 103753
Solar retinopathy: a photobiological and geophysical analysis [Case Report]
Yannuzzi LA; Fisher YL; Krueger A; Slakter J
PMCID:1298770
PMID: 3328915
ISSN: 0065-9533
CID: 32592
Macula photocoagulation lens
Yannuzzi LA; Slakter JS
PMID: 3706473
ISSN: 0002-9394
CID: 24597
An experimental model of carotid artery occlusive disease
Slakter JS; Spertus AD; Weissman SS; Henkind P
To develop an animal model for acute carotid artery occlusion suitable for studying the retinal sequelae of this disease, we performed bilateral and unilateral common carotid artery ligations on mature pigmented rats. Bilateral ligation consistently resulted in a characteristic pathologic retinal appearance, paralleling the retinopathy of carotid artery occlusive disease in humans, demonstrated by fundus photography and fluorescein angiography. Any abnormalities found in the rats with unilateral ligations were inconsistent and less severe, although fluorescein angiography proved to be more sensitive than ophthalmoscopy for detecting these subtle changes. Pepsin-trypsin retinal digests disclosed extensive disruption of the microvasculature in the eyes of bilaterally ligated animals. This model should prove to be useful in examining the reversibility of the ocular findings as well as evaluating central nervous system abnormalities after carotid artery occlusion
PMID: 6421164
ISSN: 0002-9394
CID: 24598
Experimental carotid occlusion: funduscopic and fluorescein angiographic findings
Spertus AD; Slakter JS; Weissman SS; Henkind P
A characteristic fundus picture was consistently produced following acute bilateral common carotid artery ligation in mature rats, reminiscent of human carotid occlusive disease. Two days after ligation it consisted of dilatation and tortuosity of retinal veins, blurring and swelling of the optic disc, retinal whitening primarily along the venous distribution, and straightening of retinal arteries. Fluorescein angiography showed hyperfluorescence of the disc, delay in the rate of retinal arterial and venous filling, venous dilatation, disc oedema, disruption of the retinal capillary bed pattern, and late peripapillary staining/leakage. This pattern was not seen in rats which underwent acute unilateral ligation, although some mild changes were seen on fluorescein angiography. The vascular alterations seemed to regress spontaneously within one week. A peripapillary 'halo' and a granular-appearing nerve fibre layer developed later, exclusively in bilaterally ligated animals
PMCID:1040237
PMID: 6689935
ISSN: 0007-1161
CID: 24599