https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-196.html atient's vitreoretinal surgery or whether there was a systemic cause for her zonulopathy. Although it was not suspected before the surgery, in retrospect, this patient had the classic body habitus of Marfan syndrome. Moreover, subsequent surgery in the fellow left eye found the zonule to be quite loose, but not as severe as in the right eye.How would you manage this patient's glaucoma? Given the finding of very loose zonular fibers, would you initiate a workup for Marfan syndrome? Certain microinvasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS) procedures are labeled for mild-to-moderate glaucoma. How strictly do you adhere to such labeling? Do you ever use a MIGS device in severe glaucoma?We report a case of transient corneal ectasia developed after phacoemulsification in an eye previously treated with INTRACOR. There was a myopic refractive surprise after cataract surgery. Corneal tomography showed an increase in keratometry and elevation profile compared with preoperative examination. Soft contact lenses and intraocular pressure-lowering medications were prescribed as interim treatment. Clinical improvement was seen gradually, and the resolution of myopia and ectasia was achieved at 3 months. We believe that high intraocular pressure during phacoemulsification and the weakening effect of femtosecond intrastromal presbyopic treatment can be the culprits.Three patients using a postoperative combination of topical ketorolac (Acular) and neomycin/polymyxin B sulfate/dexamethasone (Maxitrol) were diagnosed with atypical keratopathy soon after routine cataract surgery. An immediate retrospective analysis of hospital patients who had used this topical drug combination in the previous year identified 10 other patients who also had significant corneal pathology after uneventful cataract surgery. Five of the 13 affected patients had corneal melting and 1 patient had corneal perforation and endophthalmitis. At the last recorded follow-up appoint