Milan Ivanišević
University of Split
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Milan Ivanišević.
Graefes Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2010
Ivna Pleština-Borjan; Maria Medvidovic-Grubisic; Igor Zuljan; Venera Lakos; Snjezana Miljak; Irena Markovic; Milan Ivanišević
BackgroundOpen globe injuries are the most serious eye injuries in war as in peace time. The purpose of this study is to analyze wartime open globe eye injuries in 72 patients treated at the Department of Ophthalmology, Clinical Hospital of Split from July 1991 to April 1993, during the intensive war in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and to evaluate crucial factors responsible for the functional success of the treatment.MethodsWartime open globe eye injuries were retrospectively analyzed in 72 patients (80 eyes) hospitalized at Clinical Hospital of Split, Department of Ophthalmology, between July 1991 and April 1993. The causes and ways of wounding, localization of wounds and presence, nature and localization of the foreign body, as well as admission time, microsurgical management and other factors contributing to poor visual outcome were studied. Standard international classification of ocular traumas (the Birmingham Eye Trauma Terminology and the International Ocular Trauma Classification) was used for the classified and graded injuries.ResultsOpen globe eye injuries amounted to 52.65% of all war injuries to the eyes. Bilateral injuries were found in eight patients (11.11%). The most frequent cause of the injures were fragments of explosive devices (more than two-thirds). Most of the patients were admitted to the hospital within 24 hours of the injury. Using current microsurgical techniques, the attempt was made to achieve not only anatomical but also functional recovery already in the primary treatment. In 30 eyes (37.50%) final visual acuity amounted to more than 0.1, and in 22 eyes (27.50%) it reached 0.5. There was a statistically significant correlation between admission within the first 12 hours and postoperative improved visual acuity (χ2 = 4.53; p = 0.033). Statistically significantly better visual acuity was found in patients with lesions limited to the anterior segment of the eye. Primary enucleation or evisceration was performed only exceptionally: one enucleation and six eviscerations (8.75%).ConclusionThe most important factors in the prognosis of postoperational visual acuity for wartime open globe eye injuries were: (1) preoperative condition of the eye, (2) localization and extent of the wound, (3) presence, size and nature of foreign bodies, and (4) adequate surgical treatment in specialized institutions.
Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus | 2010
Veselin Škrabić; Milan Ivanišević; Robert Stanić; Ivana Unić; Kajo Bućan; Davor Galetović
The authors present a rare case of acute bilateral cataract with phacomorphic glaucoma in a girl with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes mellitus without a known history of ocular problems. Within 3 months after the diagnosis of diabetes mellitus, she presented with high intraocular pressure. Her visual acuity was limited to hand motions. The patient required immediate surgical intervention. Postoperatively, the intraocular pressure normalized and bilateral visual acuity was 6/6.
European Journal of Ophthalmology | 2018
Milan Ivanišević
Purpose: Until Helmholtz’s discovery of the ophthalmoscope, it was not possible to visualize the posterior pole of the eye in a living subject. The aim of this work is to emphasize the importance of the invention of the ophthalmoscope because the new era in ophthalmology began with it. Methods: Available literature concerning this topic was studied, especially by getting in contact with institutes for history of medicine as well as medico-historians in Germany and other countries. Results: Hermann von Helmholtz, German physician and physicist, presented and published his invention of the ophthalmoscope in 1851. Albrecht von Graefe was the first to use ophthalmoscope routinely. He said: ‘Helmholtz has opened a new world to us’. The first ophthalmoscope was not easy to use. Some ophthalmologists even thought that ophthalmoscopy is harmful for the eye, particularly for a diseased eye. First, it was used in Germany (A von Graefe), Austria (E Jäger), and Netherlands (FC Donders). In England, it was used only at Moorfields till 1855 (W Bowman). At the First International Congress of Ophthalmology in Brussels 1857, the importance of ophthalmoscopy was stressed. FC Donders said that every view with the ophthalmoscope into the living eye was a new discovery. Among retinal diseases, first were discovered pigment retinopathy (FC Donders) and retinal detachment (A Coccius) in 1853. Conclusion: Helmholtz inaugurated modern era in ophthalmology with his magnificant instrument which revolutionized the development of ophthalmology. Von Graefe popularized it. Because of the new findings, ophthalmology was definitely separated from surgery in the middle of 19th century.
Graefes Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2005
Lovro Bojić; Ratko Ermacora; Polić S; Milan Ivanišević; Zdravko Mandić; Veljko Rogošić; Mladen Lešin
Collegium Antropologicum | 2009
Kajo Bućan; Milan Ivanišević; Tatijana Zemunik; Vesna Boraska; Veselin Škrabić; Zoran Vatavuk; Davor Galetović; Ljubo Znaor
Collegium Antropologicum | 2010
Dobrila Karlica; Davor Galetović; Milan Ivanišević; Veselin Škrabić; Ljubo Znaor; Darija Jurišić
Croatian Medical Journal | 2004
Lovro Bojić; Zdravko Mandić; Milan Ivanišević; Kajo Bućan; Suzana Kovačević; Antonela Gverović; Alemka Miletić-Jurić
Collegium Antropologicum | 2004
Lovro Bojić; Milan Ivanišević; Alen Sinicic; Mladen Lešin; Veljko Rogošić; Zdravko Mandić; Branimir Cerovski
Medical archives (Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina) | 2012
Zeljko Kovacic; Milan Ivanišević; Lovro Bojić; Zlatko Hrgović; Mladen Lešin; Deni Kurelovic
Acta medica Croatica : c̆asopis Hravatske akademije medicinskih znanosti | 2011
Petar Ivanišević; Lovro Bojić; Snježana Tomić; Kajo Bućan; Milan Ivanišević; Mladen Lešin; Ivna Pleština-Borjan; Robert Stanić