The purpose of the current study was to investigate the effect of topical atropine on choroidal thickness using spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. A total of 30 healthy eyes from 30 children were analyzed in this study. A single drop of 1% atropine gel was administered twice daily for a week. Choroidal thickness (CT) was measured using SD-OCT, and changes in CT before and after administration of the eye drops were analyzed at the subfovea and at 1.0-mm intervals (up to 3.0 mm) from the fovea at superior, inferior, nasal, and temporal locations. Pre- and post-cycloplegic axial length (AL) was also measured using the IOLMaster. We observed that administration of 1% atropine gel led to a significant increase in the choroidal thickness under the fovea and at all intervals from the fovea. The greatest change in CT was observed in the inferior meridian, while the nasal meridian exhibited the least change. AL did not significantly differ before and after cycloplegia, and there was no significant correlation between the changes in AL and subfoveal CT. It was concluded that administration of 1% atropine gel can significantly increase CT in the eyes of young Chinese children, albeit with different magnitude at different locations.
The mortality rates from descending necrotizing mediastinitis (DNM) are between 25 and 40 % mainly because of delayed diagnosis and inappropriate surgical treatment. This study was undertaken to examine two surgical options for DNM and determine the optimal surgical option for DNM of the anterior mediastinum. Fifteen cases of DNM of the anterior mediastinum, January 2001 and October 2010, were retrospectively reviewed. Eleven were anterosuperior mediastinitis, with infection located above the tracheal bifurcation and four had infections involving the entire anterior mediastinum. Depending on the location of mediastinitis, open drainage of the submandibular and neck abscesses, in addition to other surgical treatments, was performed. If the infection was anterosuperior, transcervical mediastinal drainage or thoracotomy was performed. If the entire anterior mediastinum was involved, necrotic tissue was removed with thoracoscopic via subxiphoid incision, the bilateral pleurae were opened for drainage, and a tunnel connecting the neck incision and the subxiphoid incision through the whole anterior mediastinum was made for drainage. The anterosuperior mediastinitis cases were treated with either transcervical mediastinal drainage (n = 8) or thoracotomy (n = 3). Patients healed after an average of 24.5 and 20.0 days in the hospital, respectively. For the four other cases, one patient died of septic shock, while the other three patients were healed after and an average of 43.3 days in the hospital. Mortality rate was 6.7 %. The surgical procedure used to treat DNM should be selected according to the location of the infection. DNM involving the anterosuperior mediastinum can be treated by transcervical mediastinal drainage. If anterosuperior mediastinitis spreads to the side of the trachea, open thoracotomy is a suitable therapy. If the entire anterior mediastinum is involved, debridement and drainage of the anterior mediastinum should be performed with a thoracoscope via the subxiphoid incision.
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