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    Br J Ophthalmol. 1997 Jul;81(7):527-32.

    Variations of posterior vitreous detachment.

    Kakehashi A, Kado M, Akiba J, Hirokawa H.

    Department of Ophthalmology, Omiya Medical Center, Jichi Medical School, Japan.

    Comment in:

    AIMS: To identify variations in posterior vitreous detachment (PVD) and establish a clinical classification system for PVD. METHODS: 400 consecutive eyes were examined using biomicroscopy and vitreous photography and classified the PVD variations-complete PVD with collapse, complete PVD without collapse, partial PVD with thickened posterior vitreous cortex (TPVC), or partial PVD without TPVC. RESULTS: In each PVD type, the most frequently seen ocular pathologies were as follows: in complete PVD with collapse (186 eyes), age related changes without vitreoretinal diseases (77 eyes, 41.4%) and high myopia (55 eyes, 29.6%); in complete PVD without collapse (39 eyes), uveitis (23 eyes, 59.0%) and central retinal vein occlusions (8 eyes, 20.5%); in partial PVD with TPVC (64 eyes), proliferative diabetic retinopathy (30 eyes, 46.9%); and inpartial PVD without TPVC (111 eyes), age related changes without vitreoretinal diseases (62 eyes, 55.9%). This PVD categorisation was significantly associated with the prevalence of each vitreoretinal disease (p < 0.0001, chi 2 test on contingency table). CONCLUSIONS: PVD variations can be classified into four types, which is clinically useful because each type corresponds well to specific vitreoretinal changes.

    PMID: 9290361 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 1722241

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