1. Rise in intraocular pressure with elevator travel in post-vitrectomy patients
- Author
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Posey P. Y. Wong, Nicole C. Tsim, Karen K. W. Chan, Ivan H. W. Lau, Andrew C. Y. Mak, Guy L. J. Chen, Lawrence P. L. Iu, Mary Ho, Alvin L. Young, and Mårten Brelén
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract To evaluate the impact of elevator travel on intraocular pressure after vitreoretinal surgery with gas tamponade. Patients undergoing pars plana vitreoretinal surgery with and without gas insertion were recruited on post-operative day 1. All intraocular pressures were measured three times by Tono-Pen AVIA (Reichert, USA) on the fourth floor and, after rapid ascent in an elevator, on the 12th floor of the hospital. All patients were observed and asked for any symptoms of pain or nausea for at least 15 min. In this study, 54 patients were recruited. Twenty-seven patients underwent vitreoretinal procedures with gas insertion, while 27 patients without gas insertion acted as controls. The mean age of patients was 60.9 years. The mean changes in intraocular pressure of the patients with gas insertion (+ 1.39 mmHg) were greater than those without gas insertion (− 0.43 mmHg) and statistically significantly different (95% CI 1.17–2.48, P
- Published
- 2023
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