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Cystoid macular edema in uveitis
Ocular Immunology and Inflammation, 2003Cystoid macular edema (CME) can cause profound visual loss and is one of the major causes of legal blindness in patients with uveitis. It can complicate virtually any type of acute or chronic, anterior or posterior uveitis. When mild and of short duration, CME may respond to treatment used to control the intraocular inflammation.
Narciss, Okhravi, Susan, Lightman
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Cystoid Macular Edema in Uveitis
2010Macular edema is a major cause of morbidity in uveitis patients. Inflammatory mediators act on the integrity of the blood ocular barrier and on the function of the RPE pump. Chronicity leads to irreversible changes and is reported to cause up to 30% of permanent visual loss in uveitis patients.
Marc D, de Smet, Annabelle A, Okada
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2014
Macular edema is a frequent long-term complication of chronic uveitis, confirmed by a number of epidemiological studies. Its prevalence among uveitis patients is estimated between 20 and 30 % and is a major cause of permanent vision loss [1–3]. About 35 % of uveitis patients with a vision less than 0.1 (6/60) have macular edema, though its prevalence ...
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Macular edema is a frequent long-term complication of chronic uveitis, confirmed by a number of epidemiological studies. Its prevalence among uveitis patients is estimated between 20 and 30 % and is a major cause of permanent vision loss [1–3]. About 35 % of uveitis patients with a vision less than 0.1 (6/60) have macular edema, though its prevalence ...
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1985
The entity of aphakic (or pseudophakic) cystoid macular edema (ACME) continues to be a frustrating enigma for the anterior segment surgeon. Although it is predominantly a problem following cataract extraction, cystoid macular edema is seen in patients after keratoplasty (especially those who are already aphakic or those undergoing a "combined procedure"
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The entity of aphakic (or pseudophakic) cystoid macular edema (ACME) continues to be a frustrating enigma for the anterior segment surgeon. Although it is predominantly a problem following cataract extraction, cystoid macular edema is seen in patients after keratoplasty (especially those who are already aphakic or those undergoing a "combined procedure"
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Pseudophakic Cystoid Macular Edema
International Ophthalmology Clinics, 2010Nicole R, Benitah, Jorge G, Arroyo
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Cystoid Macular Edema after Cataract Surgery in the United States
Ophthalmology, 2023Fasika A Woreta
exaly
Bulletin de la Societe belge d'ophtalmologie, 2007
Cystoid macular edema is a known side effect of different systemic and local medications. Nicotinic acid used as a hypolipemiant agent can cause cystoid macular edema. Local adrenergic antiglaucomatous drugs as well as prostaglandin analogs can induce cystoid macular edema especially if other risk factors, which will be discussed, are present ...
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Cystoid macular edema is a known side effect of different systemic and local medications. Nicotinic acid used as a hypolipemiant agent can cause cystoid macular edema. Local adrenergic antiglaucomatous drugs as well as prostaglandin analogs can induce cystoid macular edema especially if other risk factors, which will be discussed, are present ...
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Optometry clinics : the official publication of the Prentice Society, 1996
Cystoid macular edema (CME) may develop in association with a wide variety of ocular conditions. It is the result of cystic accumulation of extracellular intraretinal fluid in the outer plexiform and inner nuclear layers of the retina, as a result of breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier.
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Cystoid macular edema (CME) may develop in association with a wide variety of ocular conditions. It is the result of cystic accumulation of extracellular intraretinal fluid in the outer plexiform and inner nuclear layers of the retina, as a result of breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier.
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