Subcyclo laser procedure results in patients with glaucoma
To analyse the results of subCyclo (subliminal transscleral cyclophotocoagulation) laser procedure for patients with glaucoma.
To analyse the results of subCyclo (subliminal transscleral cyclophotocoagulation) laser procedure for patients with glaucoma.
The glaucoma surgical landscape is bombarded with a variety of new microinvasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS) procedures daily. These new procedures are altering the paradigm and treatment concepts of glaucoma surgery and are accelerating the importance of earlier surgical intervention aimed at reducing morbidity of progression, reducing the need for more aggressive surgical options (while preserving those options), and reducing the burden of medication along with patientcompliance issues, which is one of the most prevalent problems in glaucoma treatment today.
As a leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide, glaucoma affects around 60.5 million people globally. Significant changes in diagnostic criteria, new therapies, and new tools for glaucoma management techniques have benefited individual patients
In order to prevent the progressive and irreversible loss of optic nerve fibres, the treatment of glaucoma aims to effectively and lastingly reduce Intraocular Pressure (IOP) in affected patients. To this end, in addition to medical and surgical techniques, means of weakening the trabeculum by laser have been developed since the 1980s, following the pilot study by Wise and Witter.
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