| Literature DB >> 26674274 |
Yasuyuki Takai1, Masaki Tanito, Kazunobu Sugihara, Tatsuo Kodama, Akihiro Ohira.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To report the surgical technique and efficacy of the temporal inverted internal limiting membrane (ILM) flap technique for a patient with an idiopathic macular hole (MH) who is unable to maintain postoperative prone positioning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26674274 PMCID: PMC5051539 DOI: 10.1097/ICB.0000000000000258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retin Cases Brief Rep ISSN: 1935-1089
Fig. 1.A. A preoperative fundus photograph of the left eye. B. An optical coherence tomography image shows a stage III MH. The maximal diameter of the MH is 351 μm (arrow).
Fig. 2.A. Schematic drawing of the temporal ILM flap technique. After a semicircular ILM notch (blue arrow) is created at 2-disk-diameter distance from temporal edge of MH (red circle), ILM is peeled and inverted in the nasal direction to fully cover the MH (blue dotted arrow). B. Capture of surgical video. An indocyanine green-stained temporal internal limiting membrane flap created at the temporal macular is inverted in the nasal direction (arrow) to cover the macular hole (arrowhead). C. Crosssectional drawing of the temporal ILM flap technique. The temporal ILM flap (arrow) is inverted to the direction of nasal retina to cover the MH and is stabilized with a low-molecular-weight viscoelastic material (arrow head).
Fig. 3.Postoperative optical coherence tomography images. A. at postoperative Week 1, the macular hole (MH) remains open under the covered internal limiting membrane (ILM) flap (arrow). B. at postoperative Week 3, the MH edges form a bridge beneath the ILM flap. C. at postoperative Week 4, the MH has closed leaving a partial defect in the inner segment/outer segment line (arrow). D. at postoperative Week 5, the full thickness of the fovea has recovered.