Diagnostics (Aug 2023)

Analysis of Bilaterality and Symmetry of Posterior Staphyloma in High Myopia

  • José M. Ruiz-Moreno,
  • Mariluz Puertas,
  • Ignacio Flores-Moreno,
  • Elena Almazán-Alonso,
  • María García-Zamora,
  • Jorge Ruiz-Medrano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13162680
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 16
p. 2680

Abstract

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The purpose of this study was to examine bilaterality and symmetry of posterior staphyloma (PS) in high myopic eyes. Methods: This cross-sectional and non-interventional study assessed 473 high myopic eyes [axial length (AL) ≥ 26 mm] of 259 patients. Patients underwent an ophthalmological examination including multimodal-imaging and myopic maculopathy grading according to Atrophic/Tractional/Neovascular (ATN) system, presence and subtype of PS, and severe pathologic myopia (PM). Bilaterality of PS and subtype’s symmetry between eyes of the same patient was assessed. Four groups were analyzed: (1) bilateral vs. unilateral PS’s eyes. Within bilateral group, symmetric vs. asymmetric subtypes according to (2) Curtin’s classification, (3) Ohno-Matsui’s classification, and (4) primary/compound subtypes. Results: Out of the total, 334 myopic eyes of 167 patients were included. The 92.8% (n = 310/334) of the eyes presented PS and was bilateral in 85.6% (n = 143/167) of the patients. Bilateral eyes showed significantly (p p p p p Conclusions: PS was bilateral in most of the patients without clinical differences between both eyes, being symmetrical in more than half of bilateral cases. Patients with bilateral PS showed higher myopic maculopathy, AL, and incidence of severe PM than unilateral PS.

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