Factors associated with severe corneal endothelial damage following acute primary angle closure in Chinese subjects.
Li Zhi, Fan Ning, Cheng Yanyan, Xiang Fei, Pan Xiaohua, Cao Kai, Zhang Ye, Zhang Qing, Li Shuning
AI Summary
This study found that acute angle closure duration is the sole factor linked to severe corneal endothelial damage, emphasizing urgent treatment to preserve corneal health.
Abstract
Purpose
To investigate the corneal endothelial damage caused by acute primary angle closure (APAC) and related risk factors for severe corneal endothelial cell damage in Chinese subjects.
Methods
In this multicentre retrospective study, 160 Chinese patients (171 eyes) diagnosed with APAC were recruited. Endothelial cell density (ECD) and morphological changes short after APAC were studied. Univariate regression and multivariate regression were used to identify risk factors associated with the extent of ECD reduction, including age, gender, education level, patients' location, systemic diseases, APAC duration (hours), highest recorded intraocular pressure (IOP), and presenting IOP. Factors associated with the probability of severe corneal damage (ECD lower than 1000/mm 2 ) were analysed based on a linear function.
Results
After one APAC episode, 12.28% eyes had ECD lower than 1000/mm 2 , 30.41% had ECD between 1000 and 2000/mm 2 , and 57.31% had ECD more than 2000/mm 2 . Attack duration was the only factor associated with severe endothelial damage (p < 0.0001). If the attack were to be subsided within 15.0 h, possibility of ECD lower than 1000/mm 2 could be controlled under 1%.
Conclusion
Shortly after the abortion of APAC, 12.28% patients experienced severe endothelial cell damage with ECD less than 1000/mm 2 . The only factor associated with severe ECD decrease was attack duration. Immediate and effective treatment is pivotal for preserving corneal endothelial function in APAC patients.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts5
In a multicentre retrospective study of 160 Chinese patients (171 eyes) diagnosed with acute primary angle closure (APAC), 12.28% of eyes had endothelial cell density (ECD) lower than 1000/mm 2 shortly after an APAC episode.
In a multicentre retrospective study of 160 Chinese patients (171 eyes) diagnosed with acute primary angle closure (APAC), attack duration was the only factor associated with severe endothelial damage (endothelial cell density lower than 1000/mm 2) (p < 0.0001).
In a multicentre retrospective study of 160 Chinese patients (171 eyes) diagnosed with acute primary angle closure (APAC), if the APAC attack was subsided within 15.0 hours, the possibility of endothelial cell density (ECD) lower than 1000/mm 2 could be controlled under 1%.
In a multicentre retrospective study of 160 Chinese patients (171 eyes) diagnosed with acute primary angle closure (APAC), 30.41% of eyes had endothelial cell density (ECD) between 1000 and 2000/mm 2 shortly after an APAC episode.
In a multicentre retrospective study of 160 Chinese patients (171 eyes) diagnosed with acute primary angle closure (APAC), 57.31% of eyes had endothelial cell density (ECD) more than 2000/mm 2 shortly after an APAC episode.
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