• Sonuç bulunamadı

Aging and the eye (Derleme)

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Aging and the eye (Derleme)"

Copied!
10
0
0

Yükleniyor.... (view fulltext now)

Tam metin

(1)

Corresponding author: Sumru Onal Altunizade Mah. Okulcikmazi Sok. No: 11/5 34660 Üsküdar İstanbul

E-mail:

sumruo_md@yahoo.com

Marmara Medical Journal 2005;18(1);43-52

Sumru Onal, Tayfun Bavbek

Department of Ophthalmology,School of Medicine, Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey

ABSTRACT

Aging is a fundamental biologic phenomenon that occurs even in the absence of disease, each cell having a genetically programmed lifespan. Tissues that do not undergo mitotic division to replace this cell fallout, such as the central nervous system and the retina, have a high incidence of aging manifestations, particularly after 75 years of age. As the lens ages, it increases in weight and thickness and decreases in accommodative power. No method to halt the formation of age-related macular degeneration and/or senile cataract has been shown to be effective. Nevertheless, advances in the treatment of age-related macular degeneration and advances in surgical removal of cataracts have made treatment very effective. Three major topics related to aging and the eye that will be discussed here are presbyopia, age-related macular degeneration and senile cataract.

Keywords: Aging, Eye, Presbyopia, Age-related macular degeneration, Cataract

YAŞLANMA VE GÖZ

ÖZET

Yaşlanma hastalık olmaksızın da gelişen temel biyolojik bir fenomen olup, her bir hücrenin genetik olarak planlanmış bir ömrü vardır. Santral sinir sistemi ve retina gibi hücre kaybını mitoz ile bölünerek yerine koyamayan dokularda özellikle 75 yaş üstünde yaşlanma belirtileri sıklığı daha fazladır. İlerleyen yaş ile birlikte lens ağırlığı ve kalınlığında artış ve akomodasyon gücünde azalma görülür. Yaşa bağlı makula dejenerasyonu ve/veya senil kataraktın gelişiminin önlenmesinde hiçbir yöntemin etkinliği gösterilememiştir. Ancak yaşa bağlı makula dejenerasyonu tedavisinde ve kataraktın cerrahi tedavisinde meydana gelen gelişmeler bu iki oküler hastalığın tedavini etkin hale getirmiştir. Burada yaşlanma ve göz başlığı altında presbiyopi, yaşa bağlı makula dejenerasyonu ve senil katarakt başlıkları incelenmiştir.

Anahtar Kelimeler: Yaşlanma, Göz, Presbiyopi, Yaşa bağlı makula dejenerasyonu, Katarakt

INTRODUCTION

Changes in the visual function with aging go beyond the need for eyeglass prescription. Frequently the physiological ocular changes that accompany aging interact with environmental or disease factors to cause visual impairment. Especially two eye diseases have high prevalence in the elderly: macular degeneration and cataract. In addition, the effects of systemic disease on the eye can cause visual impairment.

Visual impairment is the most common sensory problem faced by the elderly. Prevalence data accumulated from the National Health Interview study revealed that 12.8% of the elderly reported some visual problems, and this number increased to over 25% for those aged 85 years and older, 12% of whom were legally blind1. Perhaps the

most common problem with aging and visual acuity is refraction. Almost 95% of those

surveyed over age 65 years either wore glasses or reported needing glasses or some form of corrective lenses to improve visual acuity. However, only 45% of those over age 85 years reported that their glasses corrected all of their visual problems1.

The aging process itself has a number of effects on the eye, some of which have variable effects on vision. Physiological changes in the aging eye are: decreased tear viscosity, increased eyelid laxity, decreased color sensitivity, decreased light sensitivity and impaired lens accommodation2. The almost universal impairment in the accommodation capability of older persons is caused primarily by an increase in the density and inelasticity of the lens. Decreased contrast sensitivity and increased susceptibility to glare also occur frequently and impair reading, driving, and detailed near vision. Color vision is generally

(2)

well preserved, although the progressive yellowing of the lens over time may interfere with blue-green vision.

Because of the progressive narrowing of the pupil’s diameter and reduced translucency of the lens with advancing age the quantity of light striking the retina also decreases. Interaction of such normal aging changes with medication effects or with ocular manifestations of systemic illness may also result in a decrease in visual function3.

Presbyopia

Presbyopia is a normal part of the aging process and leads to a decrease in accommodation associated with loss of elasticity of the lens and lens capsule. Accommodative ability decreases with age. While a great deal of variability occurs in the normal level of accommodation, a general rule is that 6 diopters (D) of accommodation should be present at 40 years of age, 4D at 44 years of age, and 3D at 48 years of age. For each 4-year period under 40 years of age, 1D should be added; for each 4-year period over 48 years of age, 0.5D should be subtracted. This rule is suggested by Milder and Rubin4.

Treatment of presbyopia involves the use of plus lenses for near work. Several methods can be used to determine the proper add. The correction of emetropia and the use of trial frames to determine the proper add yields the best results. Other options for correction of presbyopia include the use of bifocal contact lenses5.

Age-related Macular Degeneration

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is not only the leading cause of legal blindness in patients aged 65 or over,6 but also is now the

overall cause of blindness in the Western world. It is estimated that in the United States 315000 people aged 75 and over will develop AMD over any 5-year period,7 and the incidence continues to

rise as a result of the increasing percentage of elderly persons and the improved management of other eye diseases.

Senile macular degeneration was first reported as a clinical entity in 1885 by Otto Haab, who described a variety of pigmentary and atrophic changes in the macular region, causing progressive impairment of central vision in patients over the age of 508. Subsequent observers referred to the different fundus manifestations of the disease as separate entities, resulting in a variety of descriptive eponyms. A major step toward a better understanding of the disease was

taken when Gass clarified that drusen, senile macular degeneration, and senile disciform macular degeneration represented a single disease9.

In recent years it has been proposed that the disease should be termed age-related maculopathy (ARM), early and late forms, with the term age-related macular degeneration AMD being reserved for the late forms and encompassing dry AMD (geographic atrophy) and wet (exudative, or neovascular ) AMD10,11. Early ARM represents

those changes predisposing to AMD. The International Epidemiological Age-related Maculopathy Study Group defined early ARM as a degenerative disorder in persons ≥50 years of age10.

Normal aging results in a spectrum of changes in the macula, many clinically undetected, that effect the outer retina, retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), Bruch’s membrane, and choriocapillaries. Photoreceptors are reduced in density and distribution. Ultrastructural aging changes in the RPE include loss of melanin granules, formation of lipofuscin granules, and accumulation of residual bodies. Basal laminar deposits which are long-spacing collagen collecting between the plasma membrane of the RPE cells and the inner aspect of the basement membrane of the RPE accumulate. Lastly, progressive involutional changes occur in the choriocapillaries12.

related Maculopathy: Nonneovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration and the evolution of Geographic Atrophy:

Onset of ARM may present clinical features in the absence of drusen often characterized by diffuse mottling of small pigment clumps or as a microreticular pattern of small lines, more obvious on fluorescein angiography.

Drusen

Donders described drusen in 185413. Drusen are

deposits of extracellular material lying between RPE and the inner collagenous zone of the Bruch’s membrane. Generally, classifications based on features of drusen morphology that are evident clinically are favored (Table I)12. Several

population based surveys have found that drusen are present in more than 95% of people, with small hard drusen being most common in all age groups11,14-15. All types of drusen can undergo

calcification, thus giving the druse a glistening appearance. Calcification of soft drusen usually precedes drusen regression and the development of RPE atrophy.

(3)

Table I: Clinicopathologic Classification of Drusen

Type of Druse Clinical Description Histologic Decription

Small, Hard (hyalinized) Yellow, well-demarcated boundaries; usually <63 µm

diameter; can be evident in the second decade of life; tend to hyperfluoresce on fluorescein angiography

Hyalinized material containing membrane-bound bodies external to the RPE basement membrane; can exist in the absence of basal laminar deposits

Soft (pseudosoft),

cluster-derived Yellowish with indistinct margins along some portions of the druse’s perimeter; usually occur after age 55 years;

variable staining on fluorescein angiography; can regress, leading to atrophy

Fused hard drusen cluster in which the amorphous internal rim of the druse is interrupted, forming globular or finely granular material

True soft Yellowish with indistinct margins; smaller than soft

cluster-derived drusen; confined to the macula; precursor to choroidal neovascularization

Associated with accumulation of membranous debris external to the RPE basement

membrane; consists of focal accentuation of basal laminar deposits, focal accentuation of basal linear deposits, or localized accumulation of basal linear deposits

Granular About 250 µm diameter; yellow, solid appearance, their

confluence resulting in crescentic sinuous shapes Coarsely granular structure consisting of membrane-bound

globules of amorphous material, small membrane fragments and cellular debris

Fluid (Serous) Soft, confluent drusen >500 µm diameter; may have pooled serous fluid in the lipoidal debris; further confluence leads to larger soft fluid drusen that resemble serous pigment epithelial detachments

Membranous (accumulation

of basal linear deposits) Paler and shallower than the yellow granular drusen; usually <250 µm diameter; on fluorescein angiography they

fluoresce later and less brightly than small, hard drusen

Reticular (pseudodrusen) Yellowish interlacing network about 250 µm diameter; first

appear in the superior outer macula; resembles soft confluent drusen, but is flat and lie deep to drusen; delayed choroidal perfusion on fluorescein angiography; carries a very high risk for choroidal neovascularization

Uncertain; the pattern has been suggested to result from fibrous placement of the middle layer of the choroid

Regressing (fading) All drusen types may disappear in time; does not signify a

return to normal state; fluorescein angiography generally shows increased transmission of fluorescence where drusen have faded

Both RPE and photoreceptors over regressing drusen

disappear, leaving a thick layer of late-type amorphous basal laminar deposit over the apex

(4)

On fluorescein angiography soft drusen fill more slowly and are not as brightly fluorescent as hard drusen, but they remain fluorescent for a longer period16. On indocyanine green angiography

(ICG) hard drusen become hyperfluorescent 2 to 3 minutes after dye administration, and this persists throughout the middle and late phases. Soft drusen are either hypofluorescent throughout the angiogram or remain undetectable17.

The cumulative incidence of late ARM in patients with bilateral drusen has been reported in two prospective studies. Among patients attending the ophthalmology clinic in England the 3-year cumulative incidence of late ARM and of exudative AMD alone were, respectively, 23.5% and 18%, one significant risk factor being degree of confluence of drusen within 1600 µm of the center of the fovea18. In the Beaver Dam study of

persons with signs of early ARM in both eyes at baseline, the respective figures at 5 years were 11% and 7.1%7. In patients who have developed

choroidal neovascularization (CNV) in the first eye, the presence of five or more drusen, or one or more large drusen, were two factors associated independently with an increased risk of developing CNV within 5 years in the second eye19. Another prospective study followed 101

patients with unilateral exudative AMD and drusen only in the fellow eye for up to 9 years. Yearly incidence rates for the development of CNV or geographic atrophy in the fellow were between 5% and 14%. The risk of CNV peaked at 4 years and decreased thereafter. The risk of CNV in patients with ARM was heralded by an increase in the number, size and confluence of drusen. The risk eventually declines and is followed by later increased risk of geographic atrophy20. This risk is

also reflected in pathologic specimens, in which active subretinal new vessels are more likely to be associated with soft membranous-type drusen.

Geographic Atrophy

Geographic atrophy (GA) is the end result of atrophic AMD and is currently defined as any sharply delineated round or oval area of hypopigmentation or apparent absence of RPE, in which choroidal vessels are more visible than surrounding areas and which must be at least 175 µm in diameter10. However since such small area

could result from regression of a single druse, other dimensions proposed have been wider, varying from 200 µm,21 to 500 µm,22 to 700

µm,14 to 1mm23. If a larger size is chosen, it has

greater prognostic significance, especially if the atrophy has already entered the fovea, because CNV then is less likely to develop or, if it should occur, is more likely to be muted.

The evolution of GA can be drusen-unrelated, drusen-related, or following pigment epithelial detachments24. Among patients with early ARM the 5-year incidence of pure GA atrophy has been found to be 4.6%7. Once GA has commenced, the factors that influence the rate and direction of further spread are the number, distribution, and regression of drusen and the extent of incipient atrophy (RPE thinning). When this extends to the central fovea, visual acuity can be expected to drop more rapidly. In general, the percentage of foveal involvement increases rapidly at first, slowing once all the area of incipient atrophy has become involved. Histological studies have shown that eyes with geographic atrophy may also contain small inactive CNV and that CNV is more frequently bilateral than clinical impressions suggest25,26.

Neovascular (Exudative) Age-related Macular Degeneration:

AMD is the major cause of severe visual loss in older adults11,15,27-31. Most AMD patients have

macular drusen or retinal pigment epithelial abnormalities or both32. However, approximately

10% of AMD patients manifest the neovascular form of the disease33. Neovascular AMD includes

CNV and associated manifestations such as retinal pigment epithelial detachment, retinal pigment epithelial tears, fibrovascular disciform scarring, and vitreous hemorrhage32.

The prevalence of AMD-associated vision loss in at least one eye increases with age11,14,15,27,28,30,31,34,35. AMD was the leading cause

of blindness in white (prevalence, 2.7 per 1000) but not black subjects randomly selected in the Baltimore Eye survey. In this study, AMD resulting in blindness affected 3% of all white subjects 80 years of age or older31. Risk factors

implicated in clinical and laboratory studies include drusen, visible (but not ultraviolet) injury, micronutrient deficiency, cigarette smoking, family history (genetic predisposition), and cardiovascular risk factors (including systemic hypertension)36,37.

(5)

Choroidal neovascularization

CNV appears as a neovascular sprout growing under or through the RPE through breaks in

Bruch’s membrane25. Blurred vision and

distortion, especially distorted near vision, are the symptoms most patients with CNV notice first32,38.

Patients may also complain of decreased vision, micropsia, metamorphopsia, or a scotoma38.

Visual acuity, although frequently decreased, may not always be affected. Functional vision generally declines in accordance with Snellen visual acuity39.

In some patients with AMD, CNV may appear as a gray-green elevation of tissue deep to the retina with overlying detachment of the neurosensory retina. The gray-green color may arise from hyperplastic RPE in response to the CNV40. However, it is not always present in older individuals with AMD. Often, the presence of blood or lipid or a sensory retinal detachment in an elderly patient with vision loss indicates the presence of CNV.

Retinal Pigment Epithelial Detachments (PED)

Retinal PED appear clinically as sharply demarcated, dome shaped elevations of RPE. They usually transilluminate if they are filled with serous fluid only. Although an overlying sensory retinal detachment may be a clue to the presence of CNV beneath a PED, sometimes a shallow neurosensory detachment may occur as a result of breakdown of the physiologic RPE pump or from disruption of the tight junctions between adjacent RPE cells in the absence of CNV41. The presence

of a PED may or may not be a feature of CNV. The fluorescein angiographic pattern can differentiate a drusenoid PED, which does not have CNV, from a fibrovascular PED, which is a form of occult CNV, as well as from serous PED, which may or may not overlie an area with CNV42,43. Several clinical signs suggest the

presence of CNV underlying an PED, including overlying sensory retinal detachment and lipid, blood, and chorioretinal folds radiating from the PED32. When confined to the sub-RPE space, the

blood may appear as a discretely elevated, green or dark red mound. The hemorrhage can dissect through the RPE into the subretinal sensory retinal space or into the retina. Rarely, blood may pass through the retina into the vitreous cavity, causing extensive vitreous hemorrhage.

Disciform Scars

Histologically, CNV usually is accompanied by fibrous tissue, even when no fibrous tissue is

readily apparent on initial presentation44. This

fibrous tissue may be accompanied by CNV (fibrovascular tissue) or not (fibroglial tissue)44. The fibrous tissue complex may be beneath the PRE (usually proliferating within the inner aspect of an abnormally thickened Bruch’s membrane) or between the RPE and the photoreceptors45. Often, over time, the plane of the RPE is destroyed by the fibrovascular or fibroglial tissue, so the location of the CNV with respect to RPE can no longer be identified readily. When the fibrous tissue becomes apparent clinically, the CNV and fibrous tissue complex may be termed a “disciform scar.”

Classification of CNV using Fluorescein Angiography

Whenever one suspects CNV for which treatment might be indicated, stereoscopic fluorescein angiography should be performed promptly. Fluorescein angiography frequently allows one to determine the pattern (classic or occult), boundaries (well defined or poorly defined), and location of the neovascular lesion with respect to the foveal avascular zone (FAZ)46. Classic CNV

appears as a well-demarcated area of uniform hyperfluorescence surrounded by a hypofluorescent margin in the early phase frames of the angiogram, with fluorescein leakage that obscures the boundaries of the lesion through the mid- and late-phase frames. Occult CNV is divided into two types. Type I is characterized by a fibrovascular RPE detachment that appears as stippled hyperfluorescence with irregular elevation of this fluorescence at the level of RPE, usually within 1-2 minutes of fluorescein injection. The boundaries are often poorly defined or difficult to demarcate and there is fluorescein leakage in the late phase frames of the angiogram. Type II has poorly demarcated boundaries with fluorescein leakage from an undetermined source at the level of RPE in the late phase frames of the angiogram, which do not correspond to classic CNV or fibrovascular PED in the early- or mid- phases46. Lesion composition is assessed using the

fluorescein angiography and the classification is defined by the proportion of the lesion that is classic CNV. Predominantly classic lesions are defined as those in which the classic component comprises 50% or more of the entire lesion. Lesions in which the classic component comprises less than 50% of the entire lesion area are defined as minimally classic and those with no evidence of classic CNV are defined no classic46. The terms well defined (well demarcated) and poorly defined (poorly or ill demarcated) refer to a description of

(6)

the boundaries of the lesion. In a well-defined lesion, the entire boundary for 360 degrees is well demarcated. If the entire boundary is not well demarcated for 360 degrees, then the lesion is poorly defined. These terms describe lesion boundaries for a lesion that may be composed of classic CNV, or occult CNV, or both. When lesions have well-defined boundaries, the CNV lesion can be classified according to the location of the most posterior boundary with respect to the center of the FAZ on the fluorescein angiogram. CNV lesions located more than 200 µm from the FAZ center are termed extrafoveal; those between 1 and 199 µm from the center are juxtafoveal; CNV lesions extending under the center of the FAZ are termed subfoveal. In contrast to other pathologic conditions predisposing to CNV in eyes with AMD, CNV presents more commonly under the FAZ center46.

Treatment

Laser photocoagulation has been shown to be beneficial only for well-defined lesions. If the entire boundary of the lesion is not well defined, then the treating ophthalmologist can not determine where to apply laser photocoagulation with certainty in order to cover the lesion its entirety; undertreatment or overtreatment will occur likely. Failure to cover the entire lesion increases the likelihood of recurrent CNV47-49 and,

for extrafoveal and juxtafoveal lesions, additional visual acuity loss47,49,50. Overtreatment likely will

destroy retinal tissue and corresponding function that was not overlying CNV unnecessarily49.

The decision for laser photocoagulation should be made considering the size of the CNV and the initial visual acuity. Specifically, the smaller the lesion and the better the visual acuity at the time of treatment, the greater will be the benefit. Laser treatment may not be indicated in three common presentations: if only occult CNV is noted in a subfoveal lesion; if the boundaries of the entire neovascular lesion are not well demarcated; and if a subfoveal lesion is large (>3.5 MPS disc diameter). A patient undergoing treatment for an extrafoveal or juxtafoveal lesion should understand that this therapy will not improve existing vision and will induce a permanent scotoma46.

The choice of wavelength for photocoagulation (green or red) appears to have no effect on the treatment benefit. The risk of recurrence appears greatest in the following situations: when the fellow eye has evidence of active CNV or scarring; when treatment fails to cover the

neovascular lesion in its entirety; and when photocoagulation is not as intense as a moderately white treatment intensity standard46.

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) involves the use of an intravenously injected photosensitizing drug combined with a low-intensity laser light to cause damage of choroidal neovascular tissue selectively through a photochemical reaction by the light-activated drug that appears to result in direct cellular injury, including damage to vascular endothelial cells and vessel thrombosis51,52. It has been shown that PDT with

verteporfin (Visudyne) can safely reduce the risk of moderate and severe vision loss in patients with subfoveal lesions that are predominantly classic CNV secondary to AMD. While this benefit seemed to be even greater in the absence of occult CNV, the effect may be related to the smaller lesions and worse visual acuity associated with predominantly classic lesions without occult CNV and not solely to the lesion composition itself53.

Additionally, lesion size in the TAP Investigation and VIP Trial was also an important predictor of the magnitude of treatment benefit with verteporfin therapy in occult with no classic and minimally classic lesion compositions54.

Potential future treatments for CNV in AMD are submacular surgery, radiation therapy and pharmacologic therapy with angiogenesis inhibitors46.

Senile Cataract

Cataract, an opacity of the lens that impairs vision, is the most common cause of visual loss in humans. Any opacity in the lens or its capsule whether congenital or acquired is known as cataract55.

Throughout the world the elderly population is increasing. For the period 1980-2020 the projected increase in the elderly population for the developed world is 186%, while in developing countries the projected increase is 356%. On this basis, the World Health Organization estimates that 54 million blind people aged 60 years or more will occur by the year 202056.

Based on morphology cataract can be classified as capsular, subcapsular, cortical, supranuclear, nuclear, lamellar and sutural cataract. Cataracts have also been classified according to developmental stage. These are: immature, intumescent, mature, hypermature and Morgagnian cataract. Etiological classification is ideally considered as the most widely accepted classification of cataract. Various types of

(7)

cataracts under this classification are congenital, developmental, senile, metabolic, traumatic, toxic and secondary cataract and cataracts associated with systemic diseases57.

The most common type of cataract encountered is senile or age-related cataract. It is an affection of advanced life and is essentially an aging process. Sometimes there appears to be a familial tendency for cataract in which case the condition may develop at an earlier age in successive generations and phenomenon is known as anticipation and as a rule is usually bilateral but develops earlier in one eye than the other. Usually some degree of cataract is present after the age of 50 years and it equally affects both sexes. Although the precise etiopathogenesis is not clear, yet the various factors involved in senile cataractogenesis are hereditary factors, cigarette smoking, alcohol use, ultraviolet irradiation, dietary factors, and severe dehydration58-61.

Senile cataract is of various types and occurs in subcapsular, cortical and nuclear regions of the lens. The locations of the predominant senile cataract have been shown to be cortical in 70%, nuclear in 25%, and subcapsular in 5% of cases57. Subcapsular Senile Cataract (Cupuliform Cataract)

These cataracts may be anterior or posterior and are seen as brown granules and cysts in the shape of a shallow cup in the subcapsular region. The anterior subcapsular cataract lies directly under the lens capsule and is associated with fibrous metaplasia of the anterior epithelium of the lens. The posterior subcapsular cataract lies just in front of the posterior capsule and is associated with posterior migration of epithelial cells of the lens. These cataracts usually develop in 60 to 80 year-old age group, but may be present in an inherited form at an earlier age. Patients with posterior subcapsular cataract specifically get troubled by bright sun light and headlights of incoming vehicles57,62.

Cortical Senile Cataract (Cuneiform or Soft Cataract)

Cortical senile cataract is the most common form of senile cataract. This type of cataract is characterized by opacities in cortical fibers and appears to be due to an accumulation of globules and vacuoles between adjacent fibers. There is hydration due to accumulation of water droplets between the fibers followed by changes in the colloid system within the fibers. The lens proteins are first denaturated and then are coagulated

forming opacity. Ultimately the whole lens becomes opaque and assumes a pearly white appearance. The appearance of cuneiform cataract with its vacuoles, radial spoke–like separation of lens fibers and wedge-shaped water clefts and shield-like configuration is characteristic. Cuneiform opacities represent areas in which lens fiber membranes get damaged allowing sodium influx and osmotic inhibition of water. Increased membrane permeability and inactivation of active transport process in these areas leads to loss of potassium, gluthatione, soluble protein and inositol. These biochemical changes eventually lead to precipitation, opacification and aggregation of lens proteins. If the whole cortex is opacified such a cataract is known as mature cataract57,62.

Nuclear Senile Cataract

In this type of senile cataract the nucleus gradually becomes opaque and cortex being clear. Increased optical density of the nucleus occurs normally with aging but it may be stimulated to excess with the formation of brown nucleus (brunescent cataract) or even a black nucleus (cataracta nigra) and is usually bilateral. Dehydration and compaction of nucleus are associated with the process of nuclear sclerosis. The sclerotic process renders the lens inelastic and hard and decreases its ability to accommodate. At first a certain degree of myopia is induced. These changes start centrally and speed towards periphery. This type of cataract does not develop into hypermature stage. The progress of cataract is slow and myopic eyes are more prone to develop this type of cataract. Biochemical changes in nuclear senile cataract include an increase in the concentrations of protein, corresponding decrease in the degree of hydration, marked increase in sodium level along with decrease in potassium concentration. These changes are associated with accumulation of yellow-brown pigment urochrome which may represent an oxidation product of amino acids or lipids. Nuclear sclerosis begins between 50 to 60 years of age and progresses very slowly unless accelerated by the superimposition of subcapsular cataract57,62. Treatment

Treatment of cataract essentially consists of its surgical removal. The indications for a particular lens surgery technique to be used may be determined by several factors. Different conditions or pathological states of the eye and the lens may dictate the use of one technique over another. In different countries, the availability of

(8)

equipment and the level of training of the surgeon may be factors that dictate the technique.

Intracapsular Cataract Extraction

Intracapsular Cataract Extraction (ICCE) is an old traditional method of cataract removal. In ICCE the entire lens is removed with cryoprobe or capsule forceps. This method has not been the procedure of choice in industrialized nations since the development of modern extracapsular techniques in the late 1970’s, primarily because of lower rates of postoperative posterior segment complications as hemorrhage, vitreous loss, retinal detachment, and cystoid macular edema. Posterior chamber intraocular lens (IOL) implantation is impossible as the posterior capsule is absent due to total removal of the lens and its capsule57,63.

Extracapsular Cataract Extraction

Extracapsular Cataract Extraction (ECCE) became popular in the 1980’s. The lens is removed without disturbing the integrity of the posterior capsule and anterior vitreous face. ECCE involves the excision of a portion of anterior capsule and nucleus expression through incision and aspiration of the residual equatorial cortex. The posterior capsule is left undisturbed and serves as resting site for the posterior chamber IOL implants63. Postoperative posterior capsule opacification (PCO) may occur in a significant number of cases. PCO can be managed using neodymium-yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Nd:YAG) laser capsulotomy57. Phacoemulsification

Kelman devised this technique about 25 years ago64-66. It differs from ECCE in that corneoscleral incisions required are very small (3.0 mm), central continuous curvilinear capsulorrhexis of about 4-5 mm is preferred over other methods of anterior capsulotomy, the use of foldable IOLs and in that the nucleus is emulsified and aspirated in the posterior chamber by the phacoemulsifier which acts through a titanium needle in an longitudinal axis at an ultrasonic speed of 400,000 times a second. Smaller incisions, more rapid wound healing, short convalescence and early stabilization of refractive error with less astigmatism are major advantages63.

New and future technologies are phaconit, laser cataract surgery using Nd:YAG or Er:YAG laser systems, laser phaconit and focused electromagnetic field technology67-69.

REFERENCES

1. Kovar MG. Aging in the eighties, Preliminary data from the supplement on aging to the National Health Interview Survey, United States, Jan-June 11984, Advance data from vital and health statistics, No 115, DHHS Publication No (PHS) 86-1250, Hyattsville, Md, 1986, Public health service. 2. Adams AJ, Wong LS, Wong L, Gould B. Visual

acuity changes with age: some new perspectives. Am J Optom Physiol Ophthalmol 1988; 65: 403-406.

3. Heath JM, Hoepner JA. Vision. In: Ham RJ, Sloane PD eds. Primary care geriatrics. A case-based approach. St Louis, Missouri: Mosby, 1997: 378-382.

4. Milder b, Rubin ML. Accommodation. In: The fine art of prescribing glasses without making a spectacle of yourself. Gainesville: Triad Scientific Publishers. 1978: 18-41.

5. Donahue SP. Loss of accommodation and presbyopia. In: Yanoff M, Duker JS, eds. Ophthalmology. St Louis, Missouri: Mosby, 1999: 11.21.1-11.21.2.

6. Ferris, FL III. Senile macular degeneration: review of epidemiologic features, Am J Epidemiol 1983; 118: 132-151.

7. Klein R, Klein BE, Jensen SC, Meuer SM. The five-year incidence and progression of age-related maculopathy: the Beaver Dam Eye Study. Ophthalmology 1997; 104: 7-21.

8. Haab O. Erkrankungen der Macula Lutea, Centralblat Augenheilkd 1885; 9: 384-391. (Cited by Duke-Elder, S: System ofophthalmology, vol 9, London, 1966, Kimpton.)

9. Gass JDM. Pathogenesis of disciform detachment of the neuroepithelium (parts I and III). Am J Ophthalmol 1967; 63: 573-711.

10. Bird AC, Bressler NB, Bressler SB, et al. The International ARM Epidemiological Study Group: An international c1assification and grading system for age-related maculopathy and age related macular degeneration. Surv Ophthalmol 1995; 39: 367-374.

11. Klein R, Klein BEK, and Linton KLP. Prevalence of age-related maculopathy: The Beaver Dam Eye Study. Ophthalmology 1992; 99: 933-943.

12. Abdelsalam A, Del Priore L, and Zarbin MA. Drusen in age-related macular degeneration: Pathogenesis, natural course, and laser photocoagulation-induced regression. Surv Ophthalmol 1999; 44: 1-29.

13. Donders FC. Beitrage zur pathologischen Anatomie des Auges. Arch Ophthalmol 1854; 1: 106. 14. Bressler NM, Bressler SB, West SK, Fine SL, and

Taylor HR. The grading and prevalence of macular degeneration in Chesapeake Bay watermen. Arch Ophthalmol 1989; 107: 847-52.

15. Vingerling JR, Dielemans I, Hofman A. The prevalence of age-related maculopathy in the Rotterdam Study. Ophthalmology 1995; 102: 205-10.

16. Barondes M, Pauleikhoff D, Chisholm IC, Minassian D, and Bird AC. Bilaterality of drusen. Br J Ophthalmol 1990; 74: 180-182.

(9)

17. Arnold JJ, Quaranta M, Soubrane G, Sarks SH, and Coscos G. Indocyanine green angiography of drusen, Am J Ophtha1mol 1997; 124: 344356. 18. Holz FG, Wolfensberger TJ, Piguet B, et al.

Bilateral macular drusen in age-related macular degeneration: prognosis and risk factors. Ophthalmology 1994; 101: 1522-1528.

19. Macular Photocoagulation Study Group. Risk factors for choroidal neovascularization in the second eye of patients with juxtafoveal or subfoveal choroidal neovascularization secondary to age-related macular degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol 1997; 115: 741-747.

20. Sarraf D, Gin T, Yu F, Brannon A, Owens SL, and Bird AC: Long term drusen study. Retina 1999; 19: 513-519.

21. Schatz H, and McDonald HR. Atrophic macular degeneration: rate of spread of geographic atrophy and visual loss, Ophthalmology 1989; 96: 1541-1551.

22. Sunness JS, Rubin GS, Applegate CA, et al. Visual function abnormalities and prognosis in eyes with age-related geographic atrophy of the macula and good visual acuity. Ophthalmology 1997; 104: 1677-1691.

23. Sarks JP, Sarks SH, and Killingsworth M. Evolution of geographic atrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium. Eye 1988; 2: 552-577. 24. Sarks SH, Sarks JP. Age-related maculopathy:

nonneovascular age-related macular degeneration and the evolution of geographic atrophy. In: Ryan SJ, Schachat AP eds. Medical Retina. Vol II. St Louis, Missouri: Mosby 2001: 1064-1098.

25. Green WR, and Enger C. Age-related macular degeneration histopathologic studies: the 1992 Lorenz E. Zimmerman Lecture. Ophthalmology 1993; 100: 1519-1535.

26. Sarks SH. Aging and degeneration in the macular region: a clinicopathological study. Br J Ophthalmol 1976; 60: 324-341.

27. Friedman DS, Katz J, Bressler NM, Rahmani B, and Tielsch J. Racial differences in the prevalence of age-related macular degeneration. The Baltimore Eye Survey. Ophthalmology 1999; 106: 1049-1055. 28. Hyman L, Lilienfeld AM, Ferris FL III and Fine

SL. Senile macular degeration: a case-control study. Am J Epidemiol 1983; 118: 213-227. 29. Kahn HA, and Moorhead HB. Statistics on

blindness model reporting area, 1969-1970. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare publication no (NIH) 73-427, Washington, DC, 1973, US Government Publication Office.

30. Leibowitz H, Krueger DE, Maunder LR, et al. The Farmingham Eye Study Monograph: an ophthalmological and epidemiological study of cataract, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy, macular degeneration, and visual acuity in a general population of 2631 adults, 1973-1975. Surv Ophthalmol 1980; 24 (suppl): 335-610

31. Sommer A, Tilsch JM, Katz J, et al. Racial differences in the cause-specific prevalence of blindness in east Baltimore. N Eng J Med 1991; 325: 1412-1417.

32. Bressler NM, Bressler SB, and Fine SL. Age-related macular degeneration. Surv Ophthalmol 1988; 32: 375-413.

33. Ferris FL III, Fine SL, and Hyman LA. Age-related macular degeneration and blindness due to

neovascular maculopathy. Arch Ophthalmol 1984; 102: 1640-1642.

34. Choroidal Neovascularization Prevention Trial Research Group: Choroidal neovascularization prevention trial research. Ophthalmology 1998; 105: 1364-1372.

35. Vinding T. Age-related macular degeneration. Macular changes, prevalence, and sex ratio: an epidemiological study of 1000 aged individuals. Acta Ophthalmol 1989; 67: 609-616.

36. Hyman L, Schachat AP, He Q, Leske MC. For the Age-Related Macular Degeneration Study Group: Hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and age-related macular degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol 2000; 118: 351-358.

37. Loewenstein A, Bressler NM, and Bressler SB. Epidemiology of RPE disease. In: Marmor MF, Wolfensberger TJ eds. Retinal pigment epithelium: current aspects of function and disease, New York: Oxford University Pres. 1999.

38. Fine AM, Elman MJ, Elbert JE, Prestia PE, Star JS, and Fine SL. Earliest symptoms caused by neovascular membranes in the macula. Arch Ophthalmol 1986; 104: 513-514.

39. Eagle RC. Mechanisms of maculopathy. Ophthalmology 1984; 91: 613-625.

40. Doyle WJ, Davidof FH, Makley TA, and Dieruf WJ. Histopathology of an active lesion of ocular histoplasmosis. Ophthalmic Forum 1984; 2: 105-111.

41. Elman MJ, Fine SL, Murphy RP, Patz A, and Auer C. The natural history of serous retinal pigment epithelium detachments in patients with age-related macular degeneration. Ophthalmology 1986; 93: 224-230.

42. Bird AC, and Marshal J. Retinal pigment epithelial detachment in the elderly. Trans Ophthalmol Soc UK 1986; 105: 674-682.

43. Macular Photocoagulation Study Group. Subfoveal neovascular lesions in age-related macular degeneration: guidelines for evaluation and treatment in the Macular Photocoagulation Study. Arch Ophthalmol 1991; 109: 1242-1257.

44. Bressler SB, Silva JC, Bressler NM, Alexander JA, and Green WR. Clinicopathologic correlation of occult choroidal neovascularization in age-related macular degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol 1992; 110: 827-832.

45. Gass JDM. Stereoscopic atlas of macular disease and treatment. St Louis, Missouri: Mosby, 1997. 46. Bressler NM, Bressler SB, Fine SL. Neovascular

(exudative) age-related macular degeneration. In: Ryan SJ, Schachat AP eds. Medical Retina. Vol II. St Louis, Missouri: Mosby 2001: 1100-1135. 47. Macular Photocoagulation Study Group. Recurrent

choroidal neovascularization after argon laser photocoagulation for neovascular maculopathy. Arch Ophthalmol 1986; 104: 503-512.

48. Macular Photocoagulation Study Group. Persistent and recurrent neovascularization after krypton laser photocoagulation for neovascular lesions of age-related macular degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol 1990; 108: 825-833.

49. Macular Photocoagulation Study Group. Persistent and recurrent neovascularization after laser photocoagulation for subfoveal choroidal neovascularization of age-related macular

(10)

degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol 1994; 112: 489-499.

50. Macular Photocoagulation Study Group. The influence of treatment coverage on the visual acuity of eyes treated with krypton laser for juxtafoveal choroidal neovascularization. Arch Ophthalmol 1995; 113: 190-194.

51. Miller JW, Schmidt-Erfurth U, Sickenberg M, et al. Photodynamic therapy for choroidal neovascularization due to age-related macular degeneration with verteporfin: results of a single treatment in a phase I and II study. Arch Ophthalmol 1999; 117: 1161-1173.

52. Schmidt-Erfurth U, Miller JW, Sickenberg M, et al. Photodynamic therapy for choroidal neovascularization due to age-related macular degeneration with verteporfin: results of retreatments in a phase I and II study. Arch Ophthalmol 1999; 117: 1177-1187.

53. Bressler NM, Arnold J, Benchaboune M, et al. Treatment of Age-Related Macular Degeneration with Photodynamic Therapy (TAP) Study Group. Verteporfin therapy of subfoveal choroidal neovascularization in patients with age-related macular degeneration: additional information regarding baseline lesion composition’s impact on vision outcomes-TAP report No. 3. Arch Ophthalmol. 2002; 120: 1443-54.

54. Blinder KJ, Bradley S, Bressler NM, et al. Treatment of Age-related Macular Degeneration with Photodynamic Therapy study group; Verteporfin in Photodynamic Therapy study group. Effect of lesion size, visual acuity, and lesion composition on visual acuity change with and without verteporfin therapy for choroidal neovascularization secondary to age-related macular degeneration: TAP and VIP report no. 1. Am J Ophthalmol. 2003; 136: 407-18.

55. Johns KJ, Feder RS, Hammill BM, Miller-Meeks MJ, Rosenfeld SI, Perry PE, eds. Lens and cataract: section 11, basic and clinical science course. San Francisco: American Academy of Ophthalmology, 2003.

56. Thylefors B, Negrel A-D, Pararajagaram R, Dadzie KY. Global data on blindness. Bull WHO. 1995; 73: 115-21

57. Garg A. Cataract. In: Agarwal S, Agarwal A, Apple DJ, Buratto L, Aliό JL, pandey SK, Agarwal A eds. Textbook of Ophthalmology. Vol 3. New Delhi, India: Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers. 2002: 1620-1659.

58. West SK, Valmadrid CT. Epidemiology of risk factors for age-related cataracts. Surv Ophthalmol 1995; 39: 323-34.

59. McCarty CA, Taylor HR. A review of the epidemiologic evidence linking ultraviolet radiation and cataracts. In: Hockwin O, Kojima M, Takahashi N, Sliney DH, eds. Progress in lens and cataract research: developments in ophthalmology. Basel: Karger, 2002: 21-31.

60. Hightower KR. A review of the evidence that ultraviolet irradiation is a risk factor in cataractogenesis. Doc Ophthalmol 1995; 88: 205-20.

61. Hollows F, Moran D. Cataract-the ultraviolet risk factor. Lancet 1981; 2: 1249-50.

62. Ashbell PA, Dualan I, Mindel J, Brocks D, Ahmad M, Epstein S. Age-related cataract. The Lancet 2005; 365: 599-609.

63. Linebarger EJ, Hardten DR, Shah GK, Lindstrom RL. Phacoemulsification and modern cataract surgery. Surv Ophthalmol 1999; 44: 123-47. 64. Kelman CD. Phaco-emulsi.cation and aspiration: a

new technique of cataract removal. Am J Ophthalmol 1967; 64: 23-35.

65. Ford JG, Karp CL, eds. Cataract surgery and intraocular lenses, 2nd edn. San Francisco: American Academy of Ophthalmology, 2001. 66. Jaffe NS, Jaffe MS, Jaffe GF. Cataract surgery and

its complications, 6th edn. St Louis: Mosby, 1997. 67. Solomon R, Donnenfeld ED. Recent advances and

future frontiers in treating age-related cataracts. JAMA. 2003; 290: 248-51.

68. Bowman DM, Allen RC. Erbium:YAG laser in cataract extraction. J Long Term Eff Med Implants. 2003; 13: 503-8.

69. Gardiner MF, Pineda R, Dana MR. Laser cataract surgery: past, present, and evolving technologies. Int Ophthalmol Clin. 2004; 44: 113-21.

Referanslar

Benzer Belgeler

Bu iki grupta, RT sonras› meydana gelen böbrek fonksiyon kayb›, birbirleriyle k›yasland›¤›nda, yaln›z RT uygulanan s›çanlarda, istatistiksel ola- rak anlaml›

Wayne Booth’un ironiyle ilgili daha önce yazılmış olan The Concept of Irony (Kierkegaard), The Com- pass of Irony (D.C. Muecke), The Word ‘Irony’ and Its Contexts: 1500-1755

Bezmialem Vakıf Üniversitesi Dahili Yoğun Bakım ünitesinde 25 Ekim 2010 ile 30 Nisan 2011 tarihleri arasında yoğun bakım ünitemizde 24 saatten fazla yatmış olan

In this report, we present a 47 years old male hypothyroid patient who had chest pain, abnormal electrocardiographic findings and increased cardiac enzymes suggesting acute

Bakanlığındaki çalışma sistemini kendimce çok teferruata girmemesi sebebiyle tenkid ettiğim ve bu yüzden bazen aleyhine yazı yazdığım sabık içişleri

AraĢtırmada antenatal eğitim alan kadınların (DHS ve bireysel eğitim) eğitim sonrası prenatal kendini değerlendirme ölçeği toplam puan ortalamaları ile “kendi ve

Soru Başlıkları: Genellikle tüketicinin dikkatini çekmeye yönelik olarak tüketici için önemli bir konuda soru sorup, metinde de bu sorunun cevabını veren reklamlarda

Abstract Background To determine ocular higher- order aberrations (HOAs) in eyes with supernormal vision after myopic astigmatic laser subepithelial keratomileusis (LASEK) and