Chorioretinal adhesion after argon laser photocoagulation
H. L. Kain
A technique for examining chorioretinal adhesion in vitro investigated the
strength of the adhesion resulting from photocoagulation. The adhesion was
reduced only within the first days following photocoagulation, returned to
normal by the third day and became enhanced at the fourth day, much earlier
than previously supposed. Optimal adhesion and enhanced adhesion resulted
only when the coagulation intensities used were sufficient to produce
clearly visible lesions that became pigmented subsequently; second, best
adhesion was produced with spot-diameters of 200 microns and greater;
third, even under optimal coagulation conditions, single barriers were not
able to resist extensive forcing, even when the exposures were confluent;
fourth, only double barriers, consisting of two rows of exposures, were
consistently able to withstand prolonged forcing. The best treatment for
retinal tears is a double barrier of large, high-intensity coagulation
spots, which affords enhanced adhesion after four days.