This study evaluated the effect of argon laser iridoplasty (ALI) on 11 eyes with primary chronic angle closure glaucoma (CACG). All eyes had an intraocular pressure greater than 20 mmHg despite maximum medical therapy and were followed up for six months after ALI. Iridoplasty successfully opened at
Argon laser iridotomy in primary angle-closure or pupillary block glaucoma
โ Scribed by Louis W. Schwartz; George L. Spaeth
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 747 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0196-8092
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
This paper describes the use of a pulsed argon laser to perform iridotomies in 87 patients. Diagnoses include: primary angle closure glaucoma, narrow angle in the fellow eye of patients with primary angle closure glaucoma, pupillary block, and after incomplete surgical iridectomies. Laser iridotomy was achieved in 79% of patients. Blue eyes were slightly more difficult to penetrate. Success was almost 100% in those with pupillary block. Penetration was most difficult in patients with primary angle closure glaucoma (64%), but more easily accomplished in the fellow eyes of such cases (87%). In 13 patients surgical peripheral iridectomy was performed on one eye while the other eye was treated with laser iridotomy. No apparent significant long term differences were noted between the two eyes of the same individual. Complications of laser iridotomy include corneal burns, pupil distortion, synechia formation, lenticular opacities, iritis, marked pigment dispersion, sudden rise in intraocular pressure, and retinal burns. At this time a longer followโup is required before it can be stated that a laser PI is more advantageous than a surgical PI. However, the laser's simplicity and ease of administration appear to warrant its continued use at this time.
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