Literature DB >> 9787358

Primary cysts of the iris pigment epithelium. Clinical features and natural course in 234 patients.

N Lois1, C L Shields, J A Shields, G Mercado.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical characteristics, natural course, and complications of a large group of patients with primary iris pigment epithelium (IPE) cysts.
DESIGN: Observational case series. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred thirty-four patients with primary IPE cysts participated.
RESULTS: Primary IPE cysts were classified as central in 6 patients (3%), midzonal in 50 patients (21%), peripheral in 170 patients (73%), and dislodged in 8 patients (3%). Central (pupillary) IPE cysts were found only in males, peripheral IPE cysts were found most often in females (69%), and no gender predilection was detected for midzonal and dislodged IPE cysts. Central and peripheral IPE cysts occurred in young patients (mean age, 20 and 33 years, respectively), whereas midzonal and dislodged IPE cysts were seen in slightly older patients (mean age, 52 and 45 years, respectively). Central IPE cysts were visible when the pupil was not dilated and appeared most often as a round or collapsed brown lesion arising from the pupillary margin, most commonly superonasally. Midzonal IPE cysts were brown and fusiform, best visualized after pupillary dilation. Peripheral IPE cysts produced a characteristic bulging in the iris stroma near the iris root, but they were directly visible in only 78% of cases. After wide dilation and patient and slit-lamp positioning, they appeared as a round clear lesion behind the iris, most often in the inferotemporal quadrant. Finally, dislodged IPE cysts appeared as a brown oval lesion, free floating in the anterior chamber (12%) or in the vitreous (12%), or fixed in the anterior chamber angle (75%). One hundred twenty-four patients (53%) were followed for a mean of 35 months (range, 3 months-19 years). In these patients, complications associated with IPE cysts included lens subluxation in one case (1%), iritis in one case (1%), focal cataract in two cases (2%), glaucoma in two cases (2%), and corneal touch in five cases (4%).
CONCLUSION: Primary IPE cysts have characteristic clinical features that serve to differentiate them from intraocular malignancies. Most cysts have a benign clinical course, and treatment is rarely necessary.

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Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9787358     DOI: 10.1016/S0161-6420(98)91034-X

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ophthalmology        ISSN: 0161-6420            Impact factor:   12.079


  27 in total

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7.  A Case of a Cavitary Iris Melanoma with Aqueous Cytological Modulation.

Authors:  Lindsay A McGrath; James F Bacon; Paul Rundle; Ian G Rennie; Hardeep Singh Mudhar
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8.  Iris cysts in children: classification, incidence, and management. The 1998 Torrence A Makley Jr Lecture.

Authors:  J A Shields; C L Shields; N Lois; G Mercado
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9.  Argon laser peripheral iridoplasty for plateau iris associated with iridociliary cysts: a case report.

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10.  A case of epithelial inclusion cyst of iris.

Authors:  Jin Hae Lee; Myoung Hee Park; Hyun Seung Kim
Journal:  Korean J Ophthalmol       Date:  2008-12
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