Bleb (medicine)

blue rubber bleb nevus syndrome

In medicine, a bleb is a blister (often hemispherical) filled with serous fluid. Blebs can form in a number of tissues due to different pathologies, including frostbitten tissues, and as a cause of spontaneous pneumothorax.

In ophthalmology, blebs may be formed intentionally in the treatment of glaucoma. In such treatments, functional blebs facilitate the circulation of aqueous humor, the blockage of which will lead to increase in eye pressure. Use of collagen matrix wound modulation device such as ologen during glaucoma surgery is known to produce vascular and functional blebs, which are positively correlated with treatment success rate. [1][2][3][4]

In the lungs, a bleb is a collection of air within the layers of the visceral pleura.

In breasts a bleb is a milk blister (also known as blocked nipple pore, nipple blister, or “milk under the skin”).[5]

External links

References

  1. 1.Yuan F, Li L, Chen X, Yan X, Wang L (2015). Biodegradable 3D-Porous Collagen Matrix (Ologen) Compared with Mitomycin C for Treatment of Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma: Results at 5 Years. J Ophthalmol. 2015:637537.
  2. Min JK, Kee CW, Sohn SW, Lee HJ, Woo JM, Yim JH (2013). Surgical outcome of mitomycin C-soaked collagen matrix implant in trabeculectomy. J Glaucoma. 22(6):456-62.
  3. Boey PY, Narayanaswamy A, Zheng C, Perera SA, Htoon HM, Tun TA, Seah SK, Wong TT, Aung T (2011). Imaging of blebs after phacotrabeculectomy with Ologen collagen matrix implants. Br J Ophthalmol. 95(3):340-4.
  4. Aptel F, Dumas S, Denis P (2009). Ultrasound biomicroscopy and optical coherence tomography imaging of filtering blebs after deep sclerectomy with new collagen implant. Eur J Ophthalmol. 19(2):223-30.
  5. White spot on the nipple


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