RESUMEN
We herein report a case of glaucoma with an intraocular pressure (IOP) decrease following total gastrectomy (TG) and anticancer treatment for gastric cancer. A 62-year-old male underwent trabeculectomy of the left and right eyes in August 2011 and July 2012, respectively. During the follow-up, IOP of the right eye was 9-12 mmHg (with bimatoprost, dorzolamide, and timolol maleate), and that of the left eye ranged between 14 and 26 mmHg (with bimatoprost, dorzolamide, timolol maleate, and brimonidine tartrate). In December 2014, TG was performed due to gastric cancer. After surgery, the patient received S-1+CDDP, weekly PAC, and CPT-11 therapies. The patient died on March X, 2017. Before TG, the body mass index (BMI) was 29.5 but decreased to 24.8 before the start of the two courses of weekly PAC therapy. IOP of the right eye was 6 mmHg (with bimatoprost), and that of the left eye was 10 mmHg (with bimatoprost, dorzolamide, and brimonidine tartrate), showing decreases. After the initiation of weekly PAC therapy, BMI was approximately 19. IOP of the right eye ranged between 6 and 10 mmHg until the final ophthalmological examination (January 11, 2017), while that of the left eye ranged between 8 and 15 mmHg. In this patient with glaucoma, IOP was not controlled by eye drop treatment, and TG for gastric cancer and postoperative treatment with anticancer drugs resulted in weight loss and a decrease in IOP.
RESUMEN
We herein present a case of congenital erythrocytosis caused by haemoglobin (Hb) Bethesda in a Japanese family. A 55-year-old asymptomatic man was referred to our hospital for the investigation of erythrocytosis, which was present in other members of his family. The patient's serum erythropoietin level was normal, and the JAK2 V617F mutation was not detected. His P50 value was mildly decreased, thus we suspected the presence of an Hb variant with a high oxygen affinity. The high-performance liquid chromatography analysis showed an abnormal Hb, and by direct sequencing we identified the Hb Bethesda variant in this patient. For the differential diagnosis, we recommend the estimation of the P50 value as a practical and useful test.