Results 211 to 220 of about 122,958 (257)
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Pseudophakic Retinal Detachments

Retina, 1985
Primary scleral buckling procedures were performed for rhegmatogenous retinal detachments in a consecutive series of 179 pseudophakic eyes. Most cases involved eyes in which extracapsular surgery had been combined with iridocapsular implants or posterior chamber lenses or in which iris-fixation IOLs were placed following intracapsular surgery.
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Inherited Retinal Detachment

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1963
Aside from gross congenital anomalies such as falciform folds and colobomata, the known hereditary causes of retinal detachment include myopic degeneration, 1 retinoschisis, 2,3 vitreous degeneration, 4 and peripheral retinal degeneration. 5 Vitreous and retinal degeneration are known to be associated with high myopia and to predispose to retinal ...
W V, DELANEY   +2 more
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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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Juvenile Retinal Detachment

International Ophthalmology Clinics, 1976
We feel that the management of juvenile retinal detachment can best be improved by earlier diagnosis. School vision-screening tests should be encouraged, and long-term followup of patients with high myopia, aphakia, and retrolental fibroplasia should be practiced. The peripheral retina should be examined in all traumatized eyes since delayed detachment
R, Winslow, W S, Tasman
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Juvenile Retinal Detachment

Ophthalmologica, 1987
The features and prognoses of 802 cases (908 eyes) of retinal detachment from 8 months to 19 years of age were studied with the patients divided into three age groups: 65 eyes in group I (0-9), 259 eyes in group II (10-14), and 584 eyes in group III (15-19). Eyes in group I were different from the others in many respects.
S, Okinami   +3 more
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Rhegmatogenous Retinal Detachment

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 2009
Patients often present after trauma with symptoms of vision loss or loss of a field of vision from a rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RRD). This study aims to equip the health care provider with knowledge on the recognition, evaluation, and management of RRD to improve communication between the patient and consultant.
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SUBCLINICAL RETINAL DETACHMENTS

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1952
A RETINAL detachment may be called subclinical when its diagnosis cannot generally be made with the usual methods of investigation. The visual field and the central acuity in such cases are not affected by the detachment, although they may be impaired by some other condition, such as lens opacities, blood in the vitreous, areas of chorioretinal ...
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Juvenile Retinal Detachment

Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus, 1977
Among the total of 537 patients treated for retinal detachment 27 (5.02%) were under the age of 20. In 44.44 percent of the cases, there was a history of trauma. In 58.33% of the fellow eyes in this group of patients, retinal pathology was found. This pathology is considered to be a predisposing factor and trauma itself is only a trigger in causing ...
J, Scharf, S, Zonis
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Rhegmatogenous Retinal Detachment

2012
Strictly speaking, ‘retinal detachment’ is a misnomer. The term denotes separation of the neuroepithelium from the pigment epithelium (rather than detachment of the retina, which consists of the neuroepithelium and the RPE, from the choroid) and therefore implies re-establishment of the space between the original layers of the embryonic optic cup.
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