Dose-response-relationship between number of laser burns and IOP reduction in cyclophotocoagulation: An animal study

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Abstract

Purpose. The relationship between number of laser burns of cyclophotocoagulation (CPC) and intraocular pressure (IOP) reduction is unknown. This animal model was established to reveal a possible dose-response- relationship between the number of applied laser burns and the IOP lowering effect. Methods. 30 chinchilla bastard rabbits were divided into 5 groups and treated with either 1, 5, 10, 20, or 30 CPC burns, respectively. IOP was followed up for 1 week. IOP reduction of a single 30-burn treatment was compared with a fractionated treatment (three sessions; one week in between; 10 burns/session). Results. IOP reduction increases nonlinearly with the number of CPC burns (max. -6.1±1.4 mmHg). Fractionated treatment shows similar IOP reduction with less complications and more constant results compared to single session treatment. Conclusions. The study reveals a complex relationship between IOP reduction and the number of CPC burns. Fractionated CPC gives comparable IOP reduction at a higher degree of safety. © 2014 Lars Wagenfeld et al.

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Wagenfeld, L., Schwarzer, H., Roessler, G., Klemm, M., Skevas, C., Richard, G., & Zeitz, O. (2014). Dose-response-relationship between number of laser burns and IOP reduction in cyclophotocoagulation: An animal study. BioMed Research International, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/983102

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