Published on 01 January 2024

Supplementary Material for: Sclerectomy Reverses Nanophthalmic Optic Neuropathy

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A.M., Mansour;S.H., Uwaydat;R., Hamam;H.I, Salti

Description

AbstractA healthy 59-year-old man reported a two-week-long abrupt vision reduction in his right eye. 20/100 best spectacle (+17.25 diopter) corrected visual acuity, unilateral widespread disc enlargement, central scotoma, and a slight color vision disruption without an afferent pupillary defect were among the positive findings in the right eye. Workup for neuro-ophthalmology was negative. Numerous consultations did not suggest any form of treatment for the patient. Review of the optical coherence tomography (OCT) indicated a small, crowded optic nerve head and substantial diffuse choroidal thickening with dome-shaped temporal peripapillary area with choroidal expansion. In addition to circumferential anterior four-quadrant 95%-deep sclerectomy from recti insertion to the vortices, radial nasal posterior sclerotomy reaching the optic nerve sheath was performed on the patient. After the procedure, 2 weeks later, the patient's vision returned, and it persisted until the 2-month follow-up. By OCT, the two eyes were comparable as far as disc contour and nerve fiber layer thickness. This form of sclerectomy, which aims at decompressing the oncotic choroidal pressure, is an effective treatment for compressive optic neuropathy in the context of nanophthalmos. Could sclerectomy assist in treating other optic neuropathies associated with peripapillary pachychoroid?

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Metrics

Dataset Index

0.3

FAIR Score

13%

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0

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0

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Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

Karger Publishers

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging

Field

Medicine

Domain

Health Sciences

Confidence Score

52%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Keywords

Medicine

Normalization Factors

FT

15.38

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00