Influence of internal limiting membrane peeling during idiopathic epiretinal membrane removal: a randomized controlled trial
Bo Hee Kim, Chang Ki Yoon, Kunho Bae, Eun Kyoung Lee, Chan Ho Lee, Dong Ik Kim, Ki Woong Bae, Un Chul Park

TL;DR
This study examines how peeling the internal limiting membrane during epiretinal membrane surgery affects outcomes, finding that non-peeling improves anatomical recovery but increases recurrence risk.
Contribution
The study introduces a randomized controlled trial exploring the impact of intentional versus non-intentional peeling of residual internal limiting membrane after epiretinal membrane removal.
Findings
Non-peeling of residual ILM resulted in lower macular thickness and better macular contour restoration.
ERM recurrence occurred only in patients who did not undergo ILM peeling, especially when residual ILM involved the fovea.
Non-peeling reduced vertical metamorphopsia severity in cases where ERM did not recur and residual ILM involved the fovea.
Abstract
In epiretinal membrane (ERM) surgery, the influence of internal limiting membrane (ILM) integrity after ERM removal is underexplored. This study investigated outcomes of idiopathic ERM surgery based on ILM condition following ERM removal and intentional peeling of residual ILM. In this prospective, randomized clinical trial, 102 patients underwent vitrectomy for idiopathic ERM. After ERM removal, ILM status was evaluated using indocyanine green staining. Patients with mostly removed ILM were allocated to group 1 (involuntary peeling), whereas those with partially removed or intact ILM were randomized 1:1 to active peeling (group 2) or non-peeling of residual ILM (group 3). Recurrence of ERM during 12-month follow-up occurred only in group 3 (36.1%), particularly when residual ILM involved the fovea. Best-corrected visual acuity, metamorphopsia, and aniseikonia did not differ among…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRetinal and Macular Surgery · Intraocular Surgery and Lenses · Vascular Malformations Diagnosis and Treatment
