TY - JOUR
T1 - Optic Nerve Sheath Decompression for Glaucomatous Optic Neuropathy With Normal Intraocular Pressure
AU - Wax, Martin B.
AU - Barrett, Debra A.
AU - Hart, William M.
AU - Custer, Philip L.
N1 - Funding Information:
Accepted for publication May 4, 1993. Thisresearchwas supported by grant EY06810
PY - 1993/9
Y1 - 1993/9
N2 - To report our therapeutic experience with optic nerve sheath decompression in patients with normal-pressure glaucoma. A case series of seven eyes from six patients with glaucoma and normal intraocular pressures who continued to have progressive visual field loss despite conventional therapy. A hospital-based, referral glaucoma service. Three men (67, 67, and 72 years of age) and three women (58, 61, and 70 years of age). Optic nerve sheath decompression. Visual field data and visual acuity measurements were obtained at regular intervals during the postoperative periods (range, 3 to 18 months). Two of seven eyes from six patients appear to have enjoyed an inital significant improvement in their visual fields with improved visual acuity in one eye of one patient. The visual fields, however, appear to have deteriorated 18 months after the initial procedure in these two patients. In the remaining four patients, no further improvement or deterioration was observed within a limited follow-up period. The transient improvement in the visual fields of one eye from each of two patients documents an intial successful use of optic nerve sheath decompression in patients with nerve fiber bundle damage in the absence of optic nerve head swelling. However, the long-term potential of optic nerve sheath decompression in these patients may be of limited value.
AB - To report our therapeutic experience with optic nerve sheath decompression in patients with normal-pressure glaucoma. A case series of seven eyes from six patients with glaucoma and normal intraocular pressures who continued to have progressive visual field loss despite conventional therapy. A hospital-based, referral glaucoma service. Three men (67, 67, and 72 years of age) and three women (58, 61, and 70 years of age). Optic nerve sheath decompression. Visual field data and visual acuity measurements were obtained at regular intervals during the postoperative periods (range, 3 to 18 months). Two of seven eyes from six patients appear to have enjoyed an inital significant improvement in their visual fields with improved visual acuity in one eye of one patient. The visual fields, however, appear to have deteriorated 18 months after the initial procedure in these two patients. In the remaining four patients, no further improvement or deterioration was observed within a limited follow-up period. The transient improvement in the visual fields of one eye from each of two patients documents an intial successful use of optic nerve sheath decompression in patients with nerve fiber bundle damage in the absence of optic nerve head swelling. However, the long-term potential of optic nerve sheath decompression in these patients may be of limited value.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0027321788&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1001/archopht.1993.01090090071022
DO - 10.1001/archopht.1993.01090090071022
M3 - Article
C2 - 8363465
AN - SCOPUS:0027321788
SN - 0003-9950
VL - 111
SP - 1219
EP - 1228
JO - Archives of Ophthalmology
JF - Archives of Ophthalmology
IS - 9
ER -