Lucentis for Treatment of Macular Edema
Cystoid Macular EdemaCystoid macular edema (CME) is the most common cause of suboptimal post-operative visual acuity in uncomplicated cataract extractions. Over two million cataract extractions are performed each year, with a reported incidence ranging from 1.5 to 6.9%, resulting in an estimated 20,000-130,000 new cases of CME annually. Clinical CME historically was associated with visual acuity of 20/40 or worse with fluorescein angiographic evidence of macular edema in a classic petaloid pattern. Angiographic CME physiologically signals an inflammatory process causing distortion of the outer plexiform layer, which if not resolved quickly could result in non-repairable visual loss. Topical, periocular, or intravitreal corticosteroids, despite their associated side effects, are the mainstay for pharmacologic treatment for patients with CME. Their efficacy has never been demonstrated in a randomized, controlled and blinded study. This is an open-label, Phase II study of intravitreally administered ranibizumab in subjects with cystoid macular edema secondary to non-ischemic retinopathy, as seen following cataract surgery with intraocular lens implantation.
Quantification of Rising the Osmotic Pressure in Diabetic Intraretinal Fluid Accumulation (Diabetic...
Diabetic Macular OedemaDiabetic macular oedema is characterized by fluid accumulation in the retinal tissue from leaking retinal vessels, the capillaries. This state can lead to severe visual loss and blindness. According to basic physiologic rules several factors influence the fluid transport between the capillaries and the surrounding tissue. One of these factors is the balance between the large molecules within the vessel lumen and the retinal tissue. Some drugs change this balance, the osmotic balance, by moving the fluid from the tissue to the vessel lumen. In relation to diabetic macular oedema, treatment with such a drug potentially would reduce the retinal thickness because it extracts fluid from the retinal tissue. Glycerol has this potential. If reduction of the thickness with glycerol is confirmed, then it proves the significance of the osmotic balance in the basic nature of diabetic macular oedema. In this study we therefore examine the time dependent change in retinal thickness after glycerol intake by an instrument called optical coherence tomography (OCT). The participants drink glycerol and the thickness of the retina is then monitored closely by OCT during the following three hours. Since diabetic changes in the retina are focal pr. definition, the secondary purpose of the study is to find any regional differences in the response. The examinations are repeated at a second visit where the patient drink another dose of glycerol, because we also want to analyse for a dose dependent response. Which dose is given at each visit is randomised on beforehand. In addition to measuring the retinal thickness a variety of examinations are performed both before and during the study, e.g. blood samples and systemic blood pressure measurements.
Evaluation of Physician Knowledge of Safety and Safe Use Information for Aflibercept in Canada
Age-related Macular Degeneration (AMD)Central Retinal Vein Occlusion (CRVO)1 moreThe primary objective of this study is to measure physician knowledge and understanding of the key safety information contained in the Eylea vial preparation instruction card, the intravitreal injection procedure video, and the product monograph.
Effectiveness of Multimodal Imaging for the Evaluation of Retinal Oedema And New vesseLs in Diabetic...
Proliferative Diabetic RetinopathyDiabetic Macular EdemaGiven the high number of people with DMO and PDR, the need for patients to be seen at short follow-up intervals, the need for frequent treatments and the requirement for long-term follow-up, there is a very large workload in Hospital Eye Services related to DMO/PDR which is making it difficult for the NHS to cope with the demand, in particular, due to shortage of ophthalmologists. This is only expected to get worse given the increasing prevalence of DM. Identifying new ways of increasing the NHS capacity and efficiency without compromising the quality of care would greatly benefit the NHS. The purpose of this study is to determine whether successfully treated patients with DMO and PDR could be followed up without a face-to-face examination by an ophthalmologist. EMERALD will evaluate a new care pathway which will include multimodal retinal imaging and separate image assessment by trained ophthalmic graders. This new pathway will be compared to the current standard care pathway: for DMO: ophthalmologist evaluating patients in clinic by slit-lamp biomicroscopy and with access to OCT images; for PDR ophthalmologists evaluating patients in clinic by slit-lamp biomicroscopy. EMERALD will compare how accurate the new pathway is at determining which patients have active or inactive disease. The costs and acceptability of current and new models of care will also be compared.
Prophylactic Effect of Ketorolac Tromethamine on the Cystoid Macular Edema After Phacoemulsification...
Cystoid Macular Edema After PhacoemulsificationThe aim of the study is determining the prophylactic effect of ketorolac tromethamine drop 0.5% eye drop on the functional and anatomical ocular characteristics of the diabetic patients after the phacoemulsification surgery. Cystoid macular edema (CME) is a ocular disease which the retinal thickness is increased by 30 % incidence at least or the visual acuity is decreased to 20/40 according to clinical definition. Ketorolac tromethamine is an non steroidal anti inflammatory medication which is used for treatment and Prophylactic for CME. Teh aim of this study is prophylactic effect of ketorolac tromethamine on choroidal and retinal thickness after Phacoemulsification in Diabetic Patients. In this randomized clinical trial, 102 eyes of 102 diabetic patients were included. All patients were undergone phacoemulsification surgery at Torfeh Eye Hospital between September 2015 and January 2017. To evaluate the prophylactic effect of ketorolac tromethamine topical eye drop, all cases were asked to apply it one day before the s:surgery in each 8 hours and continue it for 4 weeks after the surgery. Controls were not received placebo. All study population were examined using Snellen visual acuity chart, enhanced depth imaging optical coherence tomography (EDI-OCT). All patients were followed at 6, 12 and 24 weeks after the cataract surgery.
Retrospective Data Collection Study in Patients With Macular Oedema Receiving OZURDEX®
Macular EdemaRetinal Vein OcclusionThis study will use retrospective data to evaluate the safety and efficacy of OZURDEX® (dexamethasone intravitreal implant 0.7 mg) in the treatment of macular oedema due to retinal vein occlusion (RVO) in clinical practice. No intervention will be administered as part of this study.
Imaging Parameters and DME Treatment Response
Diabetic Macular EdemaDiabetic RetinopathyDiabetic macular edema (DME) is the most common cause of vision loss in diabetic patients. While anti-VEGF treatments and to a lesser extent corticosteroid and macular photocoagulation have improved outcomes in patients with DME, no single therapy is universally effective and currently there is no a priori means of determine which patients will respond best to any given therapy. The purpose of this study is to determine whether specific parameters of ocular imaging studies including optical coherence tomography and fluorescein angiography can predict response to treatment in patients with DME. This is a prospective observational cohort study that will collect clinical data and imaging studies obtained as standard of care. Up to 150 subjects with clinically significant DME will be enrolled at Duke Eye Center or its satellite offices. These imaging studies will be analyzed to determine whether specific parameters are associated with poor or favorable response to specific treatments. There will be no intervention as part of this observational trial, thus the primary risk to subjects is loss of confidentiality, which will be minimized by the study team.
Grid Laser for Diffuse Diabetic Maculopathy
Diabetic Macular EdemaDiabetic related complications are increasing day by day due to increse in the number of diabetic patients all over the world. Diabetic macular edema is one of them and a major cause of vision imparment. Various kind of treatment modalities are preent to treat this coplication. Grid laser is one treatment modality. Laser phtocoagulation is a destrictive procedure.Laser power if kept to aminimum can get the desired results without severe destruction to the retina . In this study, the investigators are going to document the effect of minimal grid laser tn loss o overcome the visioe to diabetic macular edema.
Usability and Ergonomic Evaluation of Self-Positioning System for Retinal Imaging
AMD Population - Intermediate or Advanced AMDDR Population- With or Without Diabetic Macular EdemaThe purpose of the study "Usability and Ergonomic Evaluation of Self-Positioning System for Retinal Imaging" is to enable self-operation of a monitoring device in home-simulated environment
Routine Clinical Practice for Use of Intravitreal Aflibercept Treatment in Patients With Diabetic...
Diabetic RetinopathyThe main objectives of this observational study were to describe outcomes, monitoring and treatment patterns of patients with diabetic macular edema in routine clinical practice who are either treatment naïve patients or previously treated patients. The total study population was evaluated as well as the two subgroups (previously treated patients and treatment naïve patients). This study was designated to answer French Health Authority (HAS Haute Autorité de Santé) requirements.