Cataract classification: Difference between revisions
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prematurity & some types of retinitis pigmentosa. | prematurity & some types of retinitis pigmentosa. | ||
- Secondary to metabolic disorders e.g. Galactosemia & | - Secondary to metabolic disorders e.g. Galactosemia & Wilson’s disease | ||
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Revision as of 16:07, 24 September 2017
Cataract Microchapters |
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Cataract classification On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Cataract classification |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Cataract classification |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Rohan Bir Singh, M.B.B.S.[2]
Overview
Classification
The classification of cataracts is based on four different criteria.
- Morphology,
- Age of Onset
- Maturity
- Etiology
- Location of opacity
Morphology |
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Maturity |
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Location of opacity |
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Etiological |
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- Intrauterine infections e.g. rubella and toxoplasmosis. - Maternal drug ingestion e.g. thalidomide and corticosteroids. - Genetically transmitted syndromes - Microphthalmos is often associated with cataract. - Ocular conditions with associated anomalies e.g. retinopathy of prematurity & some types of retinitis pigmentosa. - Secondary to metabolic disorders e.g. Galactosemia & Wilson’s disease |
- Congenital cataract
- Sutural cataract
- Lamellar cataract
- Zonular cataract
- Total cataract
- Secondary cataract
- Drug-induced cataract (e.g. Corticosteroids)
- Traumatic cataract
- Blunt trauma (capsule usually intact)
- Penetrating trauma (capsular rupture & leakage of lens material - calls for an emergency surgery for extraction of lens and leaked material to minimize further damage)
- Nuclear cataract - Grading correlates with hardness & difficulty of surgical removal
- 1 - Grey
- 2 - Yellow
- 3 - Amber
- 4 - Brown/Black (Note: "Black cataract" translated in some languages (like Hindi) refers to Glaucoma, not the color of the lens nucleus)
- After-cataract - posterior capsular opacification subsequent to a successful extracapsular cataract surgery (usually within 3 months - 2 years) with or without IOL implantation. Requires a quick & painless office procedure with Nd:YAG laser capsulotomy to restore optical clarity.