5 results on '"Amer, Radgonde"'
Search Results
2. Vasoproliferative Tumor Secondary to Sarcoidosis-Associated Intermediate Uveitis.
- Author
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Jalil, Sara Abdel, Jaouni, Tareq, and Amer, Radgonde
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RETINAL disease diagnosis , *SARCOIDOSIS diagnosis , *STEROID drugs , *ONCOLOGIC surgery , *CANCER complications , *CANCER diagnosis , *UVEITIS , *RETINAL detachment , *COMBINATION drug therapy , *VISION disorders , *RETINAL diseases , *OPTICAL coherence tomography , *INTRAVITREAL injections , *CYCLOSPORINE , *SARCOIDOSIS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *ANGIOGRAPHY , *COLD therapy , *VISUAL acuity , *DISEASE relapse , *OPHTHALMIC surgery , *GLUCOCORTICOIDS , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
We report the visual and clinical outcomes of a middle-aged woman who presented with exudative retinal detachment (ERD) secondary to a vasoproliferative tumor (VPT) in an eye with sarcoidosis-associated intermediate uveitis. A 55-year-old woman previously diagnosed with sarcoidosis presented with decreased vision in the left eye (LE). Visual acuity in the LE was counting fingers. She had active vitritis, and a peripheral retinal vascular mass was noted in the superotemporal periphery. The mass was associated with ERD involving the posterior pole. The patient was managed with systemic and intravitreal steroids, and cyclosporine was subsequently added as a steroid-sparing agent. Because of recurrence of ERD, the patient underwent pars plana vitrectomy, and cryotherapy and laser photocoagulation were applied to the VPT. Two months postoperatively, visual acuity in the LE improved to 6/10. There was marked regression of the VPT and total resolution of the ERD. In conclusion, we report a favorable visual and clinical outcome in a patient with VPT-associated ERD who responded to a combination of medical therapy and surgical intervention. VPT may lead to different remote complications, so timely diagnosis of these tumors and proper management of their complications is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Implications of pars planitis-associated cystoid macular edema on visual outcome and management in children.
- Author
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Navarrete, Ana, Koriat, Adi, and Amer, Radgonde
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IRIDOCYCLITIS , *EDEMA , *VISUAL acuity , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *LASER photocoagulation , *MEDICAL records , *UVEITIS - Abstract
Purpose: Pars planitis is a commonly observed type of pediatric uveitis. The aim of this study was to evaluate the implications of pars planitis–associated cystoid macular edema (CME) on visual outcome and treatment modalities. Methods: A retrospective review of medical records in a single center with academic practice. Results: Included were 33 children (mean age 8 years, 58 eyes). Eighteen eyes developed CME (31%): in 67% of them, CME was diagnosed at presentation and in 33%, it developed at a mean of 57 months after presentation. Anterior and posterior segment complications were more prevalent in eyes with CME. Papillitis was significantly associated with the development of CME (OR 12.4, 95% CI 2.3 to 65.6, p = 0.003). Patients with CME were 1.7 times more likely to be treated with systemic therapy. By the last follow-up, 50% of patients who never developed CME were without systemic therapy compared with 13% of patients who developed CME (p = 0.034). LogMAR visual acuity improvement between presentation and month 36 was 0.41 for eyes with CME compared with 0.14 for eyes that never developed CME (p = 0.009). Conclusion: Pars planitis–associated CME entailed higher prevalence of ocular complications, more frequent use of immunomodulatory therapy, and a lower rate of remission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Demographic and Clinical Features of Pediatric Uveitis in Israel.
- Author
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Habot-Wilner, Zohar, Tiosano, Liran, Sanchez, Juan M., Shulman, Shiri, Barequet, Dana, Rahat, Ori, Amarilyo, Gil, and Amer, Radgonde
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MACROPHAGE activation syndrome , *UVEITIS , *JUVENILE idiopathic arthritis , *VISUAL acuity , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *JUVENILE diseases , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DISEASE incidence , *OPTICAL coherence tomography - Abstract
Purpose: To report the epidemiology, etiology, ocular characteristics, treatment and visual outcome of pediatric uveitis in Israel.Methods: Retrospective study from two tertiary uveitis centers.Results: Included were 107 patients (182 eyes), 55% females. Mean age at diagnosis 8.8 years. Uveitis was predominantly anterior, idiopathic, bilateral, and chronic. Systemic associations were seen in 36% of patients of which the most common disease was juvenile idiopathic arthritis. Infectious uveitis accounted for 37% of posterior uveitis cases of which toxoplasmosis was the most common cause. Anterior segment complications were commonly observed at presentation (41%); the most predominant were posterior synechiae, cataract, and band keratopathy. The most common posterior segment complications were papillitis, epiretinal membrane, and macular atrophy/scar. Ninety-three percent of eyes had visual acuity >20/40 at last follow-up.Conclusion: The pattern of pediatric uveitis in Israel is similar to that in the western world. Visual outcome was good in most eyes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Uveitic Glaucoma: Long-term Clinical Outcome and Risk Factors for Progression.
- Author
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Sharon, Yael, Friling, Ronit, Luski, Moshe, Campoverde, Belén Quizhpe, Amer, Radgonde, and Kramer, Michal
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GLAUCOMA , *UVEITIS , *INTRAOCULAR pressure , *IMMUNOREGULATION , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *DISEASE progression , *DISEASE risk factors , *GLAUCOMA diagnosis , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *VISUAL acuity , *VISUAL fields , *EVALUATION research , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *OCULAR hypertension , *DISEASE complications , *DIAGNOSIS ,THERAPEUTIC use of glucocorticoids - Abstract
Purpose: To study the long-term clinical outcomes of uveitic glaucoma and to identify risk factors for progression.Methods: Retrospective study of uveitic glaucoma patients in two tertiary medical centers in 2003-2015. Patient- and disease-related data was retrieved. Clinical parameters and visual fields measured at predetermined time points were recorded. Outcome measures included maintaining intraocular pressure ≤21 mmHg and preserving visual fields.Results: Included were 34 patients (53 eyes), with a mean follow-up of 7 years. Idiopathic anterior uveitis and open-angle glaucoma were most common. In total, 62% of eyes were steroid responders. Higher IOP was associated with posterior synechiae, peripheral-anterior synechiae, steroidal, and immunomodulatory therapy (p<0.05). Glaucomatous field defects developed in 49%, with most showing no progression, despite elevation of cup-to-disc ratio (p<0.05).Conclusions: Chronic severe uveitis, expressed by structural complications and immunomodulatory therapy, was associated with high IOP and the need for more IOP lowering medications, but was unrelated to glaucomatous damage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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