Annals of ophthalmology
-
Orbital emphysema is usually described in association with fractures of the paranasal sinuses involving the orbit. We describe a rare form of orbital emphysema caused by high-pressure subconjunctival air injection from an air tube used in a garage, without apparent damage to the orbital walls.
-
A collaborative, retrospective study of 371 consecutive hyphema patients reveals an overall 3.5% incidence of rebleeding of without the use of antifibrinolytic agents. Numerous factors were reviewed on each patient, including age, sex, race, grade of hyphema, disposition, and the use of topical or systemic medications. Thirty percent of the patients were treated on an outpatient basis. The low incidence of rebleeding, particularly in less severe hyphemas (less than half the anterior chamber volume), does not support the routine use of systemic antifibrinolytics or corticosteroids.
-
Severe ocular complications developed in a patient after use of a topical anesthetic (tetracaine 0.5% ophthalmic ointment) over a period of two months.
-
A severe form of unilateral uveitis, which in most cases leads to blindness within hours of its onset, has been seen in Nepal since 1975. This disease appears with the onset of autumn in early September and lasts until the end of December in two-year cycles (1975, 1977, 1979). However, some cases occurred in 1980 as well. ⋯ Some of these were claimed to be followed by blister formation at the point of contact. These moths were presumed to be responsible for producing this uveitis in those cases. The present report describes the clinical features of the cases seen from the time the disease was first recognized, case histories of four cases seen during the last outbreak, results of laboratory experiments using the aqueous humor of these patients, and the results of experiments using three different varieties of moths.
-
Annals of ophthalmology · Nov 1983
Case ReportsTransdermal scopolamine delivery system (TRANSDERM-V) and acute angle-closure glaucoma.
A 58-year-old woman developed unilateral acute angle-closure glaucoma four days after the application of a patch of transdermal scopolamine delivery system (TRANSDERM-V).