PURPOSE To assess the prevalence of macular abnormalities not suspected by the biomicroscopic fundus examination and identified only by macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) in the preoperative evaluation for cataract… Click to show full abstract
PURPOSE To assess the prevalence of macular abnormalities not suspected by the biomicroscopic fundus examination and identified only by macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) in the preoperative evaluation for cataract surgery in a large series of Brazilian patients. SETTING Private practice, Recife, Brazil. DESIGN Retrospective case series. METHODS All eyes that had cataract surgery by the same physician between August 2014 and July 2016 were eligible. Excluded were eyes with a previous diagnosis of macular abnormalities, with a suspicious biomicroscopic fundus examination, and without OCT results. Based on the preoperative macular OCT, patients were divided into the following 2 groups: those with a normal OCT and those with an abnormal OCT. RESULTS Nine hundred fifty-two eyes (614 patients) were included in the study. Macular OCT identified abnormalities in 47 eyes (4.9%) of 44 patients (7.2%). Thirty-one eyes (3.3%) had epiretinal membrane, 7 (0.7%) had age-related macular degeneration, 4 (0.4%) had intraretinal cysts, 4 (0.4%) had a lamellar hole, and 1 (0.1%) had a macular hole. Patients with an abnormal OCT had a statistically significant higher mean age (P = .004). CONCLUSION In the preoperative evaluation for cataract surgery in Brazilian patients, 7.2% of those with a normal biomicroscopic fundus examination had macular abnormalities that were identified only by OCT.
               
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