â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Senile cataract is a progressive, age-related opacification of the crystalline lens that represents the leading cause of reversible blindness worldwide.
â– STRUCTURAL METABOLISM & PATHOLOGY:
1. Lens Fiber Packing: The crystalline lens contains highly packed protein water-soluble crystallins, organized to maintain absolute transparency.
2. Free Radical Assault: Over decades, exposure to UV light, oxidation, and systemic metabolic stress damages these structural proteins.
3. Chemical Alterations: Lens proteins undergo disulfide cross-linking, advanced glycation end-product accumulation, and structural aggregation, converting soluble crystallins into large water-insoluble aggregates.
4. Optical Distortion: De-emulsified lipid-rich aggregates disrupt the orderly path of light rays, scattering incoming light and reducing transparency.
5. Morphological Types:
- Nuclear Sclerosis: Golden-brown pigmentation and compression of the central lens nucleus.
- Cortical Cataract: Swelling and clefts within the outer lens cortex (spoke-like opacities).
â– RADIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA:
Imaging modalities (such as high-resolution CT, contrast-enhanced MRI, and point-of-care ultrasound) show characteristic density shifts, enhancement patterns, or structural deviations.
â– CLINICAL REGISTRY INSIGHTS:
Patient registry reviews depict high clinical validity in diverse populations, indicating highly correlated trends of symptom development and treatment responsiveness.
[HY-BOARD-1017]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Nuclear cataracts typically cause a temporary improvement in near vision (the 'second sight' phenomenon). This occurs because central nuclear compaction increases the refractive index of the lens, shifting the patient's vision toward a higher degree of myopia. Always correlate imaging signs with clinical presentation to avoid unnecessary surgical explorations of benign incidentalomas. Assess demographic representation when applying trial results to real-world patients.