View clinical trials related to Irvine-Gass Syndrome.
Filter by:Suprachoroidal injection is a safe way for intraocular drug delivery. It was used to treat various retinal conditions.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate retinal thickness change and the occurrence of central structural retinal changes after uneventful small-incision cataract surgery in eyes with asymptomatic early stages of epiretinal membrane.
This research study is being conducted to determine the safety and tolerability of subconjunctival injections of aflibercept in the treatment of pseudophakic cystoid macular edema that has not responded well to first-line standard of care treatment (eye drops). Pseudophakic cystoid macular edema (CME) is swelling of the retina that can occur weeks or years after cataract surgery and typically results in decreased vision. Subconjunctival injections are injections placed just beneath the clear membrane (conjunctiva) of the eye. A recent report of one patient who received two subconjunctival injections of a similar medication to the one being studied here indicated that subconjunctival injections of this class of medication may be an effective and less invasive alternative to intravitreal injections for pseudophakic CME. Because of the similarity of the drugs and the patient's treatment success, we would like to see if subconjunctival injection(s) of aflibercept will work in treating pseudophakic CME. If successful, the risk of an intraocular infection and glaucoma that comes with standard of care treatments might be greatly reduced.
The purpose of this study is to investigate which anti-inflammatory treatment is best at preventing postoperative inflammation following cataract surgery. We want to compare topical prophylaxis with NSAID eye drops to topical prophylaxis with a combination of NSAID and prednisolone. We also want to compare topical prophylaxis with eye drops to drop-less surgery where the anti-inflammatory drug is administered to the subtenonal space at the conclusion of the surgical procedure. In addition, we want to investigate if topical anti-inflammatory prophylaxis should be initiated preoperatively or postoperatively. The primary outcome is change in central macular thickness, measured by optical coherence tomography, 3 months after surgery.
Purpose: To evaluate morphological and functional characteristics of Irvine Gass syndrome Methods: 30 patients suffering on Cystoid macular edema (CME) secondary to Cataract surgery will be observed and evaluated by fluorescein-angiography, SD-OCT, reading performance, contrast sensitivity and microperimetry in a fixed time schedule