Eye
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Sub-Tenon's versus peribulbar anaesthesia for cataract surgery.
We present a comparison of one quadrant sub-Tenon's anaesthesia and peribulbar anaesthesia. Patient discomfort during injection of anaesthetic and during cataract surgery was assessed using a 10-point visual analogue scale ranging from no pain to the worst pain imaginable. Data are available for 74 patients undergoing cataract surgery under peribulbar anaesthesia and for 55 patients in whom sub-Tenon's anaesthesia was used. ⋯ Significantly fewer patients, however, experienced pain of greater than 3 (Fisher exact test, p < 0.05) in the sub-Tenon's group. In addition less anaesthetic solution and a shorter interval from administration to surgery was required in the sub-Tenon's group. Sub-Tenon's anaesthesia appears to be a more effective method of anaesthesia than the peribulbar method.
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
The effect of anaesthesia on the intraocular volume of the C3F8 gas bubble.
Long-acting intraocular gas bubbles are frequently used during vitrectomy to tamponade retinal breaks. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of nitrous oxide anaesthesia on the size and effectiveness of the post-vitrectomy gas bubble. Twenty vitrectomy procedures with injection of 12% perfluoropropane (C3F8) gas were performed. ⋯ The wide range of values of gas-fill recorded at 24 hours makes comparison of the two groups inappropriate. Several factors may account for this spread of values, but in our opinion it is the uncontrolled leakage from the sclerostomies which is the most likely. This study suggests that anaesthesia using nitrous oxide does not adversely affect the size of the C3F8 gas bubble at 24 hours post-vitrectomy when compared with anaesthesia without nitrous oxide.
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Clinical Trial
Combined radiotherapy and medical immunosuppression in the management of thyroid eye disease.
Although systemic steroids or orbital radiotherapy are effective in limiting the inflammatory response in thyroid eye disease (TED), there are reports of over 70% of treated patients requiring subsequent rehabilitative surgery: either orbital decompression or strabismus correction. This study investigated whether combined immunosuppression with primary orbital radiotherapy together with azathioprine and low-dose prednisolone, applied early in the active disease state, was more effective in treating TED. Forty consecutive patients with active TED were recruited. ⋯ One patient required subsequent cosmetic orbital decompression, 6 had successful strabismus surgery and 13 required minor cosmetic lid surgery. Compared with previously reported treatment regimes we think that combined orbital radiotherapy and medical immunosuppression is far more effective than either treatment alone in the management of active TED, and led to fewer side effects of high-dose steroids. In particular there was more than a four-fold reduction in the requirement for orbital decompression and strabismus surgery.
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Letter Case Reports
Lipaemia retinalis in a premature infant with type I hyperlipoproteinaemia.