%0 Journal Article %T Anatomic and Visual Outcomes Following Surgical Repair of Retinoschisis %A Adam J. Weiner %A Alan J. Ruby %A Antonio Capone %A Bozho Todorich %A Bruce R. Garretson %A George A. Williams %A Jade Price %A Jeremy D. Wolfe %A Kimberly A. Drenser %A Lisa J. Faia %A Maxwell S. Stem %A Sandeep Randhawa %A Tarek S. Hassan %J Journal of VitreoRetinal Diseases %@ 2474-1272 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/2474126418801263 %X The purpose of this article is to report the characteristics of patients with retinoschisis-related retinal detachments and to summarize their clinical outcomes after surgical repair. A single-center interventional case series of 37 eyes from 35 patients who underwent surgery to repair a retinoschisis-related retinal detachment between January 1, 2009 and January 1, 2017 was conducted. The mean ¡À SD age at the time of the first retinal detachment repair was 63 ¡À 13 years. As the initial surgery, scleral buckle was performed in 14 eyes, scleral buckle + vitrectomy in 14 eyes, and vitrectomy in 9 eyes. The single-operation success rate for the entire cohort was 65% (24/37), and the final anatomic success rate was 97% (36/37). Among eyes requiring more than 1 surgery, 46% (6/13) developed proliferative vitreoretinopathy. Best-corrected visual acuity improved or remained stable after 1 year of follow-up in the majority (n = 27, 73%) of eyes. The mean (SD) number of surgeries required to achieve the final anatomic and visual result was 1.8 (1.2) for all eyes (range, 1-5 surgeries). The single-surgery success rate for retinoschisis-related retinal detachments was lower than that reported for typical rhegmatogenous retinal detachments, and the incidence of proliferative vitreoretinopathy was higher. When counseling patients with retinoschisis-related retinal detachments, it is important to caution them that they may require more than 1 surgery to achieve anatomic success %K outcomes %K retinal detachment %K retinoschisis %K schisis %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2474126418801263