Treatment of experimental lens capsular tears with intense focused ultrasound.
Open Access
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in British Journal of Ophthalmology
- Vol. 69 (9) , 645-649
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.69.9.645
Abstract
High-intensity focused ultrasound was employed to seal lens capsular tears in a rabbit model. Ultrasound therapy was applied either contiguously, thereby completely covering the tear, or in a discrete exposure pattern around the tear. Both methods prevented the formation of a generalised cataract. This was in contrast to results observed in a group of control (untreated) animals which all developed generalised lens opacities. Each control animal also developed a local lens opacity at the site of the capsular tear, as did half the animals treated with the discrete pattern. No animal treated with contiguous exposures developed any local or generalised traumatic-type cataract other than the small lens opacity immediately produced by the treatment. These treatment cataracts would not constitute a significant impediment to vision so long as they did not fall on the visual axis.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Therapeutic Ultrasound in the Treatment of GlaucomaOphthalmology, 1985
- Extraction of Magnetic Foreign Bodies from the Clear LensAmerican Journal of Ophthalmology, 1979
- Prognosis in Traumatic Cataract SurgeryJournal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus, 1979
- The management of lens damage in perforating corneal lacerations.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1978
- Therapeutic Ultrasound in the Production of Ocular LesionsAmerican Journal of Ophthalmology, 1978
- EXPERIMENTAL CATARACT PRODUCTION BY HIGH-FREQUENCY ULTRASOUND1978
- Clinically Unsuspected Phacoanaphylaxis After Ocular TraumaArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1977
- Perforating injuries of the eye.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1976
- Cataract Production by UltrasoundAmerican Journal of Ophthalmology, 1967
- EFFECTS OF ULTRASONIC WAVES ON THE REFRACTIVE MEDIA OF THE EYEArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1952