A superficial keratectomy is the usual treatment. Under local anesthesia the nodes are scraped from the cornea. Pain varies from patient to patient, but the outcome is generally good.
No surgical treatment exists for striatonigral degeneration, and pharmacological treatment is not effective in the long term.
There was no successful treatment for age-related macular degeneration as of 2001.
This treated by decompression and /or surgical removal.
Nodular Mucosa is the mucous membrane that has aggravated cells. It can be found during a colonoscopy procedure and are collected for biopsies to test for certain types of disease.
Senile myocardial degeneration is degeneration of the heart. Often a heart valve has to be replaced because of this degeneration.
I understand treatment with injection of one's own (adult) retinal stem cells is available in Germany. Patients have primarily had age related macular degeneration but a few have had myopic degeneration.
The newest approved treatment for macular degeneration is injection of anti-angiogenic drugs into the eyeball. This stops hemorrhaging in patients who develop the "wet" form of the disease. Currently, a good deal of research is being conducted to improve upon this procedure and also to treat the less severe "dry" form of macular degeneration.
Nodular means like a nodule. A nodule is a mis-shapen lump.
My Degeneration was created in 2003.
Yes
There are only 2 different treatments option for this condition. You can either undergo surgery or you can try several different medications before having surgery.
A small mass of tissue or aggregation of cells.