1. Prevalence of intraocular tumours detected by ultrasonography in eyes with opaque media
- Author
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Saranya C. Balasubramaniam, Lauren A. Dalvin, and Sophie J. Bakri
- Subjects
Ophthalmology ,General Medicine - Abstract
To study the prevalence of intraocular tumours detected by screening ultrasonography in eyes with opaque media.Retrospective review of B-scan ultrasonography in eyes with opaque media and diagnosis of blindness or phthisis between January 1, 1994, and December 31, 2013. Ultrasounds for diagnostic purposes in acute endophthalmitis, retinal detachment, or vitreous hemorrhage were excluded.There were 119 blind eyes with opaque media examined with B-scan ultrasonography. Mean patient age was 59 years, with visual acuity of hand motions or worse in 89 eyes (74.8%), elevated intraocular pressure in 23 eyes (19.3%), and pain in 30 eyes (25.4%). Follow-up was ≥1 year in 69 eyes (58%) with a mean 64 months (median, 56 months; range, 12-129 months). Of these 69 eyes, ultrasound frequency was more often than annual in 2 eyes (2.9%), annual in 2 eyes (2.9%), every 13-60 months in 43 eyes (62%), every 61-120 months in 19 eyes (27.5%), and less often than every 120 months in 3 eyes (4.3%). Sixteen eyes with opaque media only received ultrasound at presentation, and 6 eyes had screening ultrasonography only prior to evisceration or enucleation. No intraocular tumours were detected in any eye during the study period.In this series, no intraocular tumours were detected by screening ultrasonography in eyes with opaque media. Larger studies with long-term follow-up are required to determine the utility and cost-effectiveness of serial ultrasonography monitoring. Ultrasound may have its highest utility in the setting of initial evaluation, clinical change, and preoperative work-up to avoid evisceration in the setting of occult malignancy.
- Published
- 2022
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