Long Anterior Zonules and Angle Closure Disease

Précis: Angle closure disease was present in 59.3% of eyes with long anterior zonules (LAZ). The cause is multifactorial including a thick anteriorly positioned crystalline lens, shorter axial length, and increased lens thickness to axial length factor. Purpose: To study the profile of eyes with LAZ presenting in a glaucoma clinic in a tertiary eye care centre and understand the pathogenesis of angle closure disease in these eyes. Methods: This was a retrospective cross-sectional study. All patients with LAZ seen from January 2014 to December 2018 were included. Demographic and clinical characteristics were noted. LAZ eyes (177 eyes of 177 patients) were compared with an equal number of age and sex-matched controls. LAZ was defined as radially oriented zonular fibers (both pigmented and nonpigmented), extending central to the normal zonular termination zone on the anterior lens surface>1 mm beyond their usual insertion of 1.42±0.24 mm from the lens equator onto the mid peripheral zone or central to it, as seen on slit-lamp examination, following pupillary dilation by a single examiner. Glaucoma was defined according to the International Society for Geographical and Epidemiological Ophthalmology classification. The following biometric parameters were compared: anterior chamber depth (ACD), axial length (AXL), lens thickness (LT), lens position (LP=ACD+0.5×LT), relative lens position (RLP=LP/AXL); lens thickness to axial length factor (LAF=(LT/AXL)×...
Source: Journal of Glaucoma - Category: Opthalmology Tags: Advances in Glaucoma: Original Studies Source Type: research