Ten year results of laser trabeculoplasty: Does the laser avoid glaucoma surgery or merely defer it?
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Eye
- Vol. 1 (1), 45-50
- https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.1987.7
Abstract
The first 150 consecutive phakic eyes from 113 patients aged 40 years or more treated with laser trabeculoplasty were evaluated. Twenty-four patients (37 eyes) have died, two eyes developed spontaneous rubeosis, and one patient (one eye) was not available, leaving 110 eyes with a 6 to 10 years follow-up. Of the 37 eyes of dead patients (average age 80 years), only one eye had filtering surgery, and 33 of the other 36 eyes had a last recorded intraocular pressure of <21 mm Hg. Of the 110 eyes of living patients followed for 6 years, 33 had filtering surgery and 62 eyes (56 per cent) had an intraocular pressure of <21 mm Hg. Of 10 eyes followed for 10 years, eight had intraocular pressures <23 mm Hg, seven had pressures <21 mm Hg, and two had had filtering surgery. Eyes with advanced disc damage at the time of trabeculoplasty had a 51 per cent rate of later glaucoma surgery, while eyes with a cup/disc ratio <0.9 at trabeculoplasty had a glaucoma surgery rate of 16 per cent. Eyes of non-white patients did as well as eyes of white patients. Computer analysis of over 1,700 eyes with two-year follow-up indicated better long-term control when 100 or more laser burns were used for trabeculoplasty. Laser trabeculoplasty can defer surgery for the remaining lifespan in elderly patients, and has controlled primary open-angle glaucoma for over 10 years, but later glaucoma surgery is often required in eyes with far advanced glaucoma damage.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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