Purpose. To report the risk of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) ocular infection after UVA-riboflavin corneal collagen cross-linking in a patient with atopic dermatitis. Methods. A 22-year-old man, with bilateral evolutive keratoconus and atopic dermatitis, underwent UVA-riboflavin corneal cross-linking and presented with rapidly progressive corneal abscesses and cyclitis in the treated eye five days after surgery. The patient was admitted to the hospital and treated with broad-spectrum antimicrobic therapy. Results. The patient had positive cultures for MRSA, exhibiting a strong resistance to antibiotics. Antibiotic therapy was modified and targeted accordingly. The intravitreal reaction is extinguished, but severe damage of ocular structures was unavoidable. Conclusion. Riboflavin/UVA corneal cross-linking is considered a safe procedure and is extremely effective in halting keratoconus' progression. However, this procedure is not devoid of infectious complications, due to known risk factors and/or poor patients' hygiene compliance in the postoperative period. Atopic dermatitis is a common disease among patients with keratoconus and Staphylococcus aureus colonization is commonly found in patients with atopic dermatitis. Therefore, comorbidity with atopic dermatitis should be thoroughly assessed through clinical history before surgery. A clinical evaluation within three days after surgery and the imposition of strict personal hygiene rules are strongly recommended.
Précis:
Trabeculectomy (TRAB) lowers the intraocular pressure (IOP) more than gonioscopy-assisted transluminal trabeculotomy (GATT) at 18 months, with a reduction in IOP of 30% or more and a significant reduction in the number of glaucoma medications compared with baseline.
Purpose:
To compare the IOP-lowering efficacy of GATT with mitomycin-C augmented TRAB in patients with uncontrolled open-angle glaucoma.
Methods:
Single-center, retrospective, comparative cohort study. One hundred ten consecutive patients (110 eyes) underwent GATT (n=61) or TRAB (n=49). The primary outcome measure was IOP reduction, defined as a percentage decrease ≥30% and absolute IOP≤18 mm Hg at 18 months with (qualified) or without (complete) medications. Secondary outcomes were visual field change, number of glaucoma medications, complications, and reintervention.
Results:
The mean±SD baseline IOP was 30.04±7.5 and 27.59±4.70 (P=0.072) with the mean number of medications of 3.08±0.73 and 2.92±0.91 (P=0.310) in TRAB and GATT, respectively. At 18 months, the mean±SD IOP was 15.26±3.47 mm Hg and 12.48±4.58 mm Hg after GATT and TRAB, respectively (P=0.002). The percentage of IOP lowering from baseline was 56.05±17.72 after TRAB and 42.04±15.56 after GATT (P<0.001). Percentages of complete and qualified success were 59% and 27% after TRAB and 46% and 31% after GATT (P=0.353). No change in visual field loss was observed in both groups. The mean reduction in medications was 2.3±1.4 and 2.1±1.5 in TRAB and GATT, respectively (P=0.493). The most frequent complication after TRAB was hypotony and after GATT hyphema. Reintervention occurred in 8.2% of cases after TRAB and in 14.8% after GATT (P=0.341).
Conclusions:
IOP lowering was greater after TRAB than after GATT at 18 months with a significant reduction in the number of medications after both procedures. Complications and reintervention occurred equally in both groups but differed in type.
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