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result(s) for
"Retinoschisis - diagnosis"
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Surgical Outcomes of Progressive Retinoschisis-Related Retinal Detachments: A 17-Year Survey From a Large Academic Center
2022
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE:
To provide an overview of progressive retinoschisis-related retinal detachment (RSRD) management at a tertiary referral center.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
Single-institution retrospective case series from January 1, 2003, to May 1, 2020.
RESULTS:
Progressive RSRD occurred in 0.9% of patients with retinoschisis. Mean (range) age at time of surgery was 58.7 years (40.0 to 74.0). Ten eyes were initially treated with scleral buckle, three eyes with vitrectomy, and three eyes with combined scleral buckle and vitrectomy. Overall reattachment rate was 100.0%; single-surgery success was 56.2%. Proliferative vitreoretinopathy developed in 10.0% of scleral buckles, 33.3% of vitrectomies, and 33.3% of combined surgeries.
CONCLUSIONS:
Progressive RSRD is rare and poses surgical management challenges. Final retinal attachment can be achieved successfully but often requires secondary and staged surgeries. Localization of outer retinal breaks may help guide surgical management. Further research—such as a large-scale, prospective, multicenter, randomized trial—would be needed to determine the optimal surgical technique.
[Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging Retina. 2022;53:132–138.]
Journal Article
Accuracy of a deep convolutional neural network in the detection of myopic macular diseases using swept-source optical coherence tomography
by
Tabuchi, Hitoshi
,
Ishitobi, Naofumi
,
Sogawa, Takahiro
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Artificial intelligence
2020
This study examined and compared outcomes of deep learning (DL) in identifying swept-source optical coherence tomography (OCT) images without myopic macular lesions [i.e., no high myopia (nHM) vs. high myopia (HM)], and OCT images with myopic macular lesions [e.g., myopic choroidal neovascularization (mCNV) and retinoschisis (RS)]. A total of 910 SS-OCT images were included in the study as follows and analyzed by k-fold cross-validation (k = 5) using DL's renowned model, Visual Geometry Group-16: nHM, 146 images; HM, 531 images; mCNV, 122 images; and RS, 111 images (n = 910). The binary classification of OCT images with or without myopic macular lesions; the binary classification of HM images and images with myopic macular lesions (i.e., mCNV and RS images); and the ternary classification of HM, mCNV, and RS images were examined. Additionally, sensitivity, specificity, and the area under the curve (AUC) for the binary classifications as well as the correct answer rate for ternary classification were examined. The classification results of OCT images with or without myopic macular lesions were as follows: AUC, 0.970; sensitivity, 90.6%; specificity, 94.2%. The classification results of HM images and images with myopic macular lesions were as follows: AUC, 1.000; sensitivity, 100.0%; specificity, 100.0%. The correct answer rate in the ternary classification of HM images, mCNV images, and RS images were as follows: HM images, 96.5%; mCNV images, 77.9%; and RS, 67.6% with mean, 88.9%.Using noninvasive, easy-to-obtain swept-source OCT images, the DL model was able to classify OCT images without myopic macular lesions and OCT images with myopic macular lesions such as mCNV and RS with high accuracy. The study results suggest the possibility of conducting highly accurate screening of ocular diseases using artificial intelligence, which may improve the prevention of blindness and reduce workloads for ophthalmologists.
Journal Article
The Road towards Gene Therapy for X-Linked Juvenile Retinoschisis: A Systematic Review of Preclinical Gene Therapy in Cell-Based and Rodent Models of XLRS
by
Koster, Céline
,
van der Veen, Isa
,
ten Asbroek, Anneloor L. M. A.
in
Analysis
,
Animals
,
Disease
2024
X-linked juvenile retinoschisis (XLRS) is an early-onset progressive inherited retinopathy affecting males. It is characterized by abnormalities in the macula, with formation of cystoid retinal cavities, frequently accompanied by splitting of the retinal layers, impaired synaptic transmission of visual signals, and associated loss of visual acuity. XLRS is caused by loss-of-function mutations in the retinoschisin gene located on the X chromosome (RS1, MIM 30083). While proof-of-concept studies for gene augmentation therapy have been promising in in vitro and rodent models, clinical trials in XLRS patients have not been successful thus far. We performed a systematic literature investigation using search strings related to XLRS and gene therapy in in vivo and in vitro models. Three rounds of screening (title/abstract, full text and qualitative) were performed by two independent reviewers until consensus was reached. Characteristics related to study design and intervention were extracted from all studies. Results were divided into studies using (1) viral and (2) non-viral therapies. All in vivo rodent studies that used viral vectors were assessed for quality and risk of bias using the SYRCLE’s risk-of-bias tool. Studies using alternative and non-viral delivery techniques, either in vivo or in vitro, were extracted and reviewed qualitatively, given the diverse and dispersed nature of the information. For in-depth analysis of in vivo studies using viral vectors, outcome data for optical coherence tomography (OCT), immunohistopathology and electroretinography (ERG) were extracted. Meta-analyses were performed on the effect of recombinant adeno-associated viral vector (AAV)-mediated gene augmentation therapies on a- and b-wave amplitude as well as the ratio between b- and a-wave amplitudes (b/a-ratio) extracted from ERG data. Subgroup analyses and meta-regression were performed for model, dose, age at injection, follow-up time point and delivery method. Between-study heterogeneity was assessed with a Chi-square test of homogeneity (I2). We identified 25 studies that target RS1 and met our search string. A total of 19 of these studies reported rodent viral methods in vivo. Six of the 25 studies used non-viral or alternative delivery methods, either in vitro or in vivo. Of these, five studies described non-viral methods and one study described an alternative delivery method. The 19 aforementioned in vivo studies were assessed for risk of bias and quality assessments and showed inconsistency in reporting. This resulted in an unclear risk of bias in most included studies. All 19 studies used AAVs to deliver intact human or murine RS1 in rodent models for XLRS. Meta-analyses of a-wave amplitude, b-wave amplitude, and b/a-ratio showed that, overall, AAV-mediated gene augmentation therapy significantly ameliorated the disease phenotype on these parameters. Subgroup analyses and meta-regression showed significant correlations between b-wave amplitude effect size and dose, although between-study heterogeneity was high. This systematic review reiterates the high potential for gene therapy in XLRS, while highlighting the importance of careful preclinical study design and reporting. The establishment of a systematic approach in these studies is essential to effectively translate this knowledge into novel and improved treatment alternatives.
Journal Article
Clinical and genetic features of retinoschisis in 120 families with RS1 mutations
2023
Background/aimsX-linked retinoschisis (XLRS), associated with RS1, is the most common type of X-linked retinopathy in children. This study aimed to identify clinical and genetic features of retinoschisis in 120 families with RS1 variants in China.Methods RS1 variants were collected from our in-house exome data and were predicted by multiple-step bioinformatics analysis. Clinical data of 122 patients from 120 families with potential pathogenic RS1 variants were analysed and summarised, respectively.ResultTotally, 79 hemizygous variants (53 missense, 25 truncation and 1 indel), were detected. All except one (78/79, 98.7%), including 22 novels, were classified as potential pathogenic and detected exclusively in 120 families with retinoschisis. Clinical data demonstrated an average age of presentation at 5 years (1 month–41 years). Macular changes were classified as macular schisis (87.5%), macular atrophy (10.7%), normal (0.9%) and unclassified (0.9%). Patients with macular atrophy had older age but similar visual acuity compared with macular schisis. Peripheral retinal changes included flat retinoschisis (52.4%), bullous retinoschisis (BRS) (10.7%) and normal-like (36.9%) patients. Spontaneous regression was observed in two patients with BRS on follow-up examination. Visual acuity in the peripheral retinoschisis group was worse than that without peripheral retinoschisis.ConclusionAlmost all rare RS1 variants were potential pathogenic. All patients with RS1 pathogenic variants showed detectable characteristics in the macula and/or peripheral retina. Our data on RS1 variants and associated clinical phenotypes may be of value for clinical diagnosis and genetic test of retinoschisis.
Journal Article
Myopic foveoschisis: a clinical review
by
Kiousis, G
,
Yang, Y
,
Gohil, R
in
692/308/409
,
Diagnostic Techniques, Ophthalmological
,
Endotamponade
2015
To review the literature on epidemiology, clinical features, diagnostic imaging, natural history, management, therapeutic approaches, and prognosis of myopic foveoschisis. A systematic Pubmed search was conducted using search terms: myopia, myopic, staphyloma, foveoschisis, and myopic foveoschisis. The evidence base for each section was organised and reviewed. Where possible an authors’ interpretation or conclusion is provided for each section. The term myopic foveoschisis was first coined in 1999. It is associated with posterior staphyloma in high myopia, and is often asymptomatic initially but progresses slowly, leading to loss of central vision from foveal detachment or macular hole formation. Optical coherence tomography is used to diagnose the splitting of the neural retina into a thicker inner layer and a thinner outer layer, but compound variants of the splits have been identified. Vitrectomy with an internal limiting membrane peel and gas tamponade is the preferred approach for eyes with vision decline. There has been a surge of new information on myopic foveoschisis. Advances in optical coherence tomography will continually improve our understanding of the pathogenesis of retinal splitting, and the mechanisms that lead to macular damage and visual loss. Currently, there is a good level of consensus that surgical intervention should be considered when there is progressive visual decline from myopic foveoschisis.
Journal Article
Peripheral fundus findings in X-linked retinoschisis
2017
Background/aimsVitreous haemorrhage (VH) and retinal detachment (RD) cause a precipitous decline in vision in a subset of patients with X-linked retinoschisis (XLRS), an otherwise a slowly progressive condition. This study aims to report the frequency of macular and peripheral retinal findings in a large cohort of patients with XLRS and to determine whether peripheral retinal findings are associated with VH and RD.MethodsA retrospective observational case series was performed in 65 patients with XLRS with a pathogenic variant in retinoschisin 1. Chart review included examination notes, fundus photographs and optical coherence tomography (OCT). Fisher exact tests and univariable logistic regression analysis were used to determine the association between peripheral retinal findings (including retinoschisis, metallic sheen, vascular sheathing, pigmentary changes, white spiculations and vitreous veils) and complications (including VH and RD).ResultsSeven eyes (8%) showed normal macular structure on OCT. Peripheral retinoschisis was significantly associated with both VH and RD. Out of 10 eyes with complications, 9 (90%) had peripheral retinoschisis, compared with 33 out of 116 eyes (28%) without complications (p=0.0014). In addition, each additional peripheral finding increased the odds of RD by a factor of 4.06 (95% CI 1.58 to 10.39, p=0.028). There were no complications in the 28 eyes with a normal periphery (p=0.84) or in the 35 eyes with metallic sheen (p=0.42).ConclusionThe data suggest that patients with peripheral retinoschisis are at increased risk for VH and RD. Furthermore, patients with additional peripheral retinal findings together with peripheral schisis may carry additional risk for RD.
Journal Article
Characterization and diagnosis of retinoschisis and schisis detachments using spectral domain optical coherence tomography
2023
PurposeTo characterize retinoschisis in a large series using spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), including rates of schisis detachment and macular involvement in cases of peripheral retinoschisis.MethodsIn this retrospective, cross-sectional, descriptive study, consecutive patients with diagnosis of retinoschisis in at least one eye were identified using billing codes between January 2012 and May 2021. Charts were reviewed to verify diagnosis of retinoschisis or schisis detachment. SD-OCT and clinical examination was used to identify frequency of macular schisis, peripheral schisis, and schisis detachment, and characteristics of retinoschisis including frequency of inner and outer wall breaks, distribution of layers split, and location of involvement of peripheral pathology. SD-OCT images of insufficient quality were excluded from the pertinent analysis.Results281 eyes of 191 patients were included. 195 (69.4%) eyes had peripheral retinoschisis, 15 (5.3%) had schisis detachment, 66 (23.5%) had macular retinoschisis alone, and 5 (1.8%) had combined macular and peripheral retinoschisis. Of the eyes without macular retinoschisis, 7.0% had schisis detachment. Of the remainder, 4 (2.1%) had inner wall breaks, and 24 (12.3%) had outer wall breaks. In eyes with peripheral retinoschisis, splitting occurred in the outer plexiform layer in 58.9%, the retinal nerve fiber layer in 8.9%, a combination of layers in 26.8%, and indeterminate in 5.4%. Location of peripheral involvement was inferotemporal in 58.5%, superotemporal in 14.1%, temporal in 13.7%, and inferior in 12.2%.ConclusionSD-OCT helped to identify the presence of schisis detachment and breaks, confirmed diagnosis in challenging cases, and demonstrated the layer of splitting within the neurosensory retina. This series represents the largest such study to date.
Journal Article
Observation of macular hole associated with retinoschisis in patients with high myopia
2023
Abstract PurposeTo observe the characteristics of highly myopic macular holes (HMMHs) with macular retinoschisis (MRS) by optical coherence tomography (OCT) and explore the possible relationship between HMMHs and different types of MRS.MethodsWe consecutively reviewed the clinical data and OCT images of the patients with HMMHs from June 2015 to February 2021. Then we picked eyes with MRS from these HMMHs for analysis. The minimum linear diameter (MLD), basal diameter (BD), and height (H) of HMMHs were measured. HMMHs were grouped according to the extent or layer involvement of the concomitant MRS and the characteristics were compared among groups. The impact of MRS on the MLD of macular hole was analyzed with multivariable linear regression.ResultsWe included 127 patients with MRS from 168 HMMHs (75.5%) for analysis.According to the different classification systems, the most frequent type of MRS in HMMHs was S3 (foveal but not entire macular area MRS) (62.2%) and both inner- and outer- (I/O-MRS) involved types. In our study, HMMHs with more extensive MRS had larger MLD, larger BD, larger H, and poorer best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA). Meanwhile, HMMHs with outer layer-involved MRS (outer MRS and I/O-MRS) had larger BD than HMMH with only inner layer-involved MRS. (All P < 0.05) Multivariable linear regression further illustrated only the extent of MRS was significantly associated with the MLD of HMMH, while there was no significant correlation between the involved retinal layers and the MLD of HMMH.ConclusionHMMH with MRS presented as a predominant type in HMMHs. The MRS was always with a relatively large extent and involved both inner and outer layers. MLD of HMMH was mainly affected by the extent of MRS.
Journal Article
Surgical outcomes of non-fovea-sparing internal limiting membrane peeling using a double-staining technique for symptomatic myopic foveoschisis: a retrospective study
2025
Purpose
To investigate the incidence of postoperative macular hole (MH), visual acuity, and anatomical recovery in patients who underwent a non-fovea-sparing technique using a double-staining method for symptomatic myopic foveoschisis without pre-existing macular holes.
Study design
A retrospective study.
Methods
We evaluated 39 eyes from 39 consecutive patients diagnosed with myopic foveoschisis from May 2017 to September 2022 at Fujita Health University Hospital. All patients underwent non-fovea-sparing internal limiting membrane peeling using a double-staining method and were monitored for 6 months postoperatively. Best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) as measured by the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR), central retinal thickness (CRT), and the presence of foveoschisis were assessed using optical coherence tomography (OCT) preoperatively (pre) and at 1 month (1 M), 3 months (3 M), and 6 months (6 M) postoperatively.
Results
No cases of postoperative rhegmatogenous retinal detachment were observed. A postoperative MH developed in one eye. The mean logMAR values at pre, 1 M, 3 M, and 6 M were 0.38 ± 0.37, 0.23 ± 0.33, 0.18 ± 0.25, and 0.13 ± 0.29, respectively (all
P
< 0.001). The mean CRTs at pre, 1 M, 3 M, and 6 M were 384.6 ± 177.2, 262.2 ± 84.4, 200.3 ± 64.9, and 185.6 ± 61.0 μm, respectively (all
P
< 0.001). Foveoschisis was observed in all 39 eyes (100%) preoperatively and in 17 eyes (43.6%) at 1 M, nine eyes (34.6%) at 3 M, and zero eyes (0%) at 6 M postoperatively.
Conclusion
The non-fovea-sparing double-staining technique was effective in treating myopic foveoschisis without MH, leading to significant improvements in both visual function and anatomical recovery. This method may be a promising surgical option for managing myopic foveoschisis.
Journal Article
Peripapillary and macular retinoschisis - A vision-threatening sequelae of advanced glaucomatous cupping
by
Raj, Priyanka
,
Kannan, Naresh B
,
Mishra, Chitaranjan
in
advanced glaucoma
,
Antiglaucoma Agents
,
Care and treatment
2021
Purpose:
To present a selected case series of advanced glaucoma-associated peripapillary and macular retinoschisis and response to various treatment strategies with a comprehensive literature review.
Methods:
Retrospective observational case series. Retrospective review of five selected cases of advanced glaucoma with peripapillary and macular retinoschisis.
Results:
All five patients had advanced glaucomatous damage with macular and peripapillary retinoschisis, three (patients 2, 3, and 5) had a neurosensory detachment of the macula. Increased intraocular pressure was managed with maximal antiglaucoma medications and G6 micropulse diode laser treatment in the first patient, transscleral diode laser in the second patient, mitomycin-C augmented trabeculectomy in the third patient, maximal antiglaucoma medications alone in the fourth patient, pars plana vitrectomy followed by trabeculectomy in the fifth patient.
Conclusion:
We speculate that peripapillary and macular retinoschisis may indicate a vision-threatening sequelae of advanced glaucoma. The probable inciting factor for this vision-threatening pathology being elevated intraocular pressure, fluctuations in intraocular pressure, and chronic glaucoma with advanced cupping. We emphasize that meticulous examination of the macula in patients with advanced glaucoma is mandatory. It is imperative to do OCT macula in patients with advanced glaucoma to diagnose this distinct entity at an earlier stage and preserve the existing visual potential.
Journal Article