Abstract
To evaluate panretinal photocoagulation for ischemic central vein occlusion and macular grid-pattern photocoagulation for macular edema with reduced visual acuity due to central vein occlusion and to further define the natural history of central vein occlusion. A multicenter randomized controlled clinical trial supported by the National Eye Institute, Bethesda, Md. A total of 728 eyes from 725 patients were entered into one or more of four study groups: perfused, nonperfused, indeterminate perfusion, and macular edema. Follow-up of study patients is still in progress and no results are available for the randomized groups (nonperfused and macular edema). Thirtyeight (83%) of 46 evaluable eyes in the indeterminate group eventually demonstrated at least 10 disc areas of nonperfusion (28 eyes) or developed iris and/or angle neovascularization before retinal status could be determined (10 eyes). Four-month follow-up information is available for 522 of the 547 eyes in the perfused group. Thirty of these 522 eyes demonstrated iris and/or angle neovascularization at or before the 4-month follow-up visit. An additional 51 eyes had developed evidence of at least 10 disc areas of nonperfusion by the time of the 4-month visit. These findings confirm the importance of frequent follow-up examinations, including undilated slitlamp examination of the iris, and gonioscopy in the management of all patients with recent onset of central vein occlusion. © 1993, American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Baseline and Early Natural History Report: The Central Vein Occlusion Study. (1993). Archives of Ophthalmology, 111(8), 1087–1095. https://doi.org/10.1001/archopht.1993.01090080083022
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