Spontaneous separation in idiopathic vitreomacular traction syndrome associated with contralateral full-thickness macular hole

PURPOSE. Vitreomacular traction syndrome (VMTS) and full-thickness macular hole are two different well-known entities that on follow-up may be subjected to clinical modifications. Precisely, a spontaneous separation of idiopathic VMTS occurred in three eyes of three patients relieving in addition tr...

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Autores:
Tipo de recurso:
Fecha de publicación:
2006
Institución:
Universidad del Rosario
Repositorio:
Repositorio EdocUR - U. Rosario
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.urosario.edu.co:10336/24016
Acceso en línea:
https://repository.urosario.edu.co/handle/10336/24016
Palabra clave:
Adult
Aged
Article
Case report
Contact lens
Disease association
Echography
Female
Fluorescence angiography
Human
Idiopathic disease
Male
Optical coherence tomography
Pigment epithelium
Priority journal
Retina fovea
Retina macula hole
Retina maculopathy
Retrospective study
Slit lamp
Traction therapy
Visual acuity
Vitreomacular traction syndrome
Vitreous body detachment
Aged
Female
Fluorescein angiography
Follow-up studies
Fundus oculi
Humans
Macula lutea
Male
Middle aged
Retinal perforations
Retrospective studies
Syndrome
Treatment outcome
Visual acuity
Vitreous detachment
Idiopathic
Macular hole
Optical coherence tomography
Spontaneous separation
Tractional rpe detachment
Vitreomacular traction
differential
optical coherence
Diagnosis
Tomography
Rights
License
Abierto (Texto Completo)
Description
Summary:PURPOSE. Vitreomacular traction syndrome (VMTS) and full-thickness macular hole are two different well-known entities that on follow-up may be subjected to clinical modifications. Precisely, a spontaneous separation of idiopathic VMTS occurred in three eyes of three patients relieving in addition traction of the posterior hyaloid that had led also to a focal macular retinal pigment epithelial detachment (RPE). An association to a full-thickness macular hole was observed in the contralateral eye of one of the patients. METHODS. This is a retrospective study of three patients evaluated with fluorescein angiography and documented with optical coherence tomography using the Stratus (OCT) model 3000, with scans analysis and protocols analysis, measuring the size and shape of vitreomacular adhesions, macular thickness changes before and after the spontaneous separation of the tractional posterior hyaloid adhesion. In addition, the vitreous was evaluated with contact lens slit lamp biomicroscopy and ultrasound. The associated contralateral macular hole in one of the patients was surgically treated. RESULTS. Two of the three eyes with spontaneous separation of the VMTS recovered 20/25 central visual acuity; the other eye maintained the initial 20/50 visual acuity. The treated macular hole recovered 20/100 corrected visual acuity. CONCLUSIONS. Spontaneous separation of posterior hyaloid is a possible outcome during follow-up of idiopathic VMTS that can be well evaluated and documented with OCT while macular fluorescein angiography may be silent in cases like these presently reported. Central vision recovery can be excellent following the spontaneous separation, which releases anterior-posterior traction including on the retinal pigment epithelium and decreases macular thickness as measured with OCT. Therefore, regarding management, the indication for vitrectomy should be delayed awaiting the spontaneous release of vitreomacular traction in 4 to 6 months. The association between idiopathic VMTS in one eye and full-thickness macular hole in the opposite eye of one patient is an important pathophysiologic consideration. © Wichtig Editore, 2006.