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Retinal detachment

Insight - the Journal of the American Society of Ophthalmic Registered Nurses, 1998
A retinal detachment is often traumatic and shocking to patients once they become aware of the condition. Nurses have the unique opportunity to assist these patients in accepting and in coping with this potential serious vision loss through understanding, education, rehabilitation, and ocular safety.
L S, Elfervig, J L, Elfervig
openaire   +2 more sources

RETINAL DETACHMENT

Ophthalmology Clinics of North America, 2001
RD is a serious and well-known complication after cataract surgery, developing in 1% to 3% of all patients undergoing cataract extraction. High myopia, disruption of the posterior capsule intraoperatively or postoperatively by Nd: YAG laser, and vitreous loss increases the risk for RD.
A S, Banker, W R, Freeman
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Retinal detachment

Nature Reviews Disease Primers
Retinal detachment (RD) occurs when the neurosensory retina, the neurovascular tissue responsible for phototransduction, is separated from the underlying retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Given the importance of the RPE for optimal retinal function, RD invariably leads to decreased vision.
Jonathan B. Lin   +4 more
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Retinal Dialyses and Retinal Detachment

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1968
The data from 131 eyes operated upon by one of us (W.S.H.) for retinal detachment due to dialysis in a consecutive series of 1,352 eyes operated for retinal detachment were analyzed. Dialyses were found to be a common cause (10%) of all retinal detachment and are the most common cause (50%) of retinal detachments in children and young adults.
William S. Hagler, Alvin W. North
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Pseudophakic retinal detachment

Survey of Ophthalmology, 2003
Pseudophakic retinal detachment is a rare, but potentially serious, complication of cataract surgery. The incidence of pseudophakic retinal detachment following current surgical techniques of cataract extraction, including extracapsular cataract extraction by nuclear expression and phacoemulsification, is lower than that found after intracapsular ...
Lois, N, Wong, D
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The Patient with Retinal Detachment

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1957
RETINAL detachment is a disease in which sudden blindness incapacitates the body, fear may derange the mind, and satisfactory treatment must overcome both. It is a disease in which it is more evident than in many others that proper healing depends on a closely integrated team made up of the patient, the nurse, and the doctor, and no member of the team ...
Graham Clark, Cora L. Shaw
openaire   +3 more sources

Pseudophakic retinal detachment

Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology, 1991
A total of 93 cases of pseudophakic retinal detachment are reported. The present study showed that vitreous loss had occurred during cataract surgery in 28% of eyes, indicating that anterior segment complications are an important contributory factor to aphakic retinal detachment in these cases.
Wong, D   +4 more
openaire   +4 more sources

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