Literature DB >> 22654496

A survey of prosthetic eye wearers to investigate mucoid discharge.

Keith Pine1, Brian Sloan, Joanna Stewart, Robert J Jacobs.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study aimed to better understand the causes and treatments of mucoid discharge associated with prosthetic eye wear by reviewing the literature and surveying anophthalmic patients.
METHODS: An anonymous questionnaire was completed by 429 prosthetic eye wearers who used visual analog scales to self-measure their discharge experience for four discharge characteristics: frequency, color, volume, and viscosity. These characteristics were analyzed with age, ethnicity, years wearing a prosthesis, eye loss cause, removal and cleaning regimes, hand-washing behavior, age of current prosthesis, and professional repolishing regimes as explanatory variables. Eighteen ocularists' Web sites containing comments on the cause and treatment of discharge were surveyed.
RESULTS: Associations were found between discharge frequency and cleaning regimes with more frequent cleaning accompanying more frequent discharge. Color was associated with years of wearing and age, with more years of wearing and older people having less colored discharge. Volume was associated with cleaning regimes with more frequent cleaners having more volume. Viscosity was associated with cleaning regimes and years of wearing with more frequent cleaning and shorter wearing time accompanying more viscous discharge. No associations were found between discharge characteristics and ethnicity, eye loss cause, hand washing, age of current prosthesis, or repolishing regimes. Forty-seven percent of ocularists' Web sites advised that discharge was caused by surface deposits on the prosthesis, 29% by excessive handling of the prosthesis, and 24% by other causes.
CONCLUSIONS: A standardized treatment protocol for managing discharge is lacking. More frequent prosthesis removal and cleaning was associated with more severe discharge, but the direction of cause and effect has not been established. Professional repolishing regimes had limited impact on discharge experience. Further research into the socket's response to prosthetic eye wear, including the physical, chemical, and biological elements of the conjunctiva, the socket fluids, and the deposits that cover the prosthetic eye is recommended.

Entities:  

Keywords:  anophthalmia; deposits; discharge; prosthetic eye; secretions

Year:  2012        PMID: 22654496      PMCID: PMC3363311          DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S31126

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1177-5467


Mucoid discharge associated with prosthetic eye wear is a common occurrence that impacts on the quality of life of people who have lost an eye. Pine et al1 report that discharge is the second most important concern for experienced prosthetic eye wearers after health of their remaining eye and affects 93% of wearers – 60% of these on a daily basis. The literature does not provide a complete understanding of the nature and causes of discharge associated with prosthetic eye wear. This is reflected in the range of opinions offered by ocularists’ Web sites and the lack of a standardized treatment protocol for this distressing condition.2 This study attempts to provide a better understanding of discharge by examining aspects of prosthetic eye wear that are likely to be associated with discharge. It investigates the influence on discharge of hand washing before handling the prosthesis, removal and cleaning regimes, repolishing frequency, and the effect on discharge of wearers’ age and wearers’ ethnicity.

Methods

A survey of 18 ocularist websites3–20 found to provide advice about mucoid discharge and/or prosthetic eye cleaning regimes was carried out. Ethics approval to send a questionnaire to prosthetic eye wearers in New Zealand was obtained from the Multi-region Ethics Committee of the Ministry of Health, New Zealand. The New Zealand Artificial Eye Service, the Royal New Zealand Foundation of the Blind, the Accident Compensation Corporation, and five District Health Boards agreed to search their databases and post the anonymous questionnaire to their anophthalmic patients. A total of 1373 letters with the questionnaires were mailed out. No record could be kept of “Gone No Address” returns or if any patients received more than one letter. The questionnaire was divided into two sections: Section 1 requested demographic information and information about how the prosthetic eye was cared for. Data were gathered on age, ethnicity, date of eye loss, why the eye was lost, date of fitting the present prosthesis and date of last professional repolish, how often the prosthesis was removed for cleaning, the reason for adopting the particular cleaning regime, whether hands were washed before removing the prosthetic eye, whether the prosthesis was left out overnight, how easy could the prosthesis be removed, and whether help was required to remove it. Section 2 asked participants to describe the nature and frequency of any discharge they were currently experiencing using the visual analog scales shown in Figure 1. There was a scale for each of the four discharge characteristics: color, viscosity, volume, and frequency. Each scale was continuous with 0 at the left end and 10 at the right end. The descriptors placed above the scale assisted participants to mark a position along the scale that best described their experience with the particular discharge characteristic. Numbers and descriptors towards the right end of each scale reflected greater severity of discharge experience. For example, on the viscosity scale “runny” corresponded with 0–1, “stringy” at 3–4 suggests the formation of mucus strands, “moderately thick” was placed at 6–7, and “very thick” at 9–10 reflected the most severe experience.
Figure 1

Visual analog scales for self-measuring four discharge characteristics.

The participants were then asked whether they felt that having their prosthetic eyes professionally repolished improved discharge and if so, how long the improvement lasted.

Statistical analysis

To investigate factors related to the frequency, volume, color, and viscosity of discharge, a general linear model was used (one for each outcome) with explanatory variables of age, ethnicity (European/other, Maori/Pacific, Asian), years wearing a prosthesis, reason for eye loss (accident, medical, congenital), frequency cleaned (at least once per week [1], less than once a week but at least once a month [2], less than once a month but at least once a year [3], never [4]), frequency of professional repolish (entered as more frequently than yearly [1], every one to two years [2], less than every two years but sometimes [3], never [4]), hand washing before removing (coded as no [0], yes sometimes [1], yes mostly [2], yes always [3]), and age of current prosthesis. As many participants did not record the frequency of professional repolishing, the analyses were first run including this variable but it was removed when not shown to be associated with any discharge characteristic.

Results

Forty-seven percent of ocularists’ websites advised that mucoid discharge was caused by surface deposits that build up on the prosthetic eye, 29% that it was caused by excessive handling of the prosthesis, and 24% gave other causes, such as dust and dirt in the socket. The recommended cleaning regime for 47% of the sites was to not remove the prosthesis unless it was uncomfortable or discharging. Thirty-five percent recommended that the prosthetic eye should be left alone and only removed by the ocularist yearly or every 6 months. A further 18% recommended a set routine for removal and cleaning that varied between daily and twice monthly (Table 1).
Table 1

Summary of advice relating to discharge published on ocularists’ websites

Percentage
Cause of discharge (n = 17)
Build-up of deposits47%
Handling the prosthesis29%
Other24%
Recommended cleaning regime (n = 17)
Do not remove unless uncomfortable or discharging47%
Leave in and do not handle35%
Set regime – daily to twice monthly18%
Of the 1373 questionnaires mailed to New Zealand prosthetic eye wearers, 429 (31%) were completed and returned.

Prosthetic eye removal and cleaning regimes

Of the wearers who completed this section of the questionnaire, 35% removed and cleaned their prosthetic eyes daily, 15% less frequently than daily but up to and including weekly, 8% between weekly and monthly, 14% monthly, and 27% less frequently than monthly. Participants’ reasons for their particular cleaning regime included excessive discharge, discomfort, hygiene, because they were advised to, and habit. The most common reasons cited were excessive discharge or discomfort and hygiene, although hygiene was less important for those removing their prostheses less frequently than monthly.

Variables associated with discharge measures

Frequency of repolish was not shown to be associated with any of the measures of discharge so was not included in the analyses reported due to the number of responders not answering this question (Figure 2, Table 2).
Figure 2

Frequency, color, volume, and viscosity of discharge as a function of different removal and cleaning regimes.

Note: Bars indicate standard error.

Table 2

Associations of explanatory variables with discharge characteristics

Explanatory variableFrequency of dischargeColor of dischargeVolume of dischargeViscosity of discharge




Beta coefficientStandard errorP valueBeta coefficientStandard errorP valueBeta coefficientStandard errorP valueBeta coefficientStandard errorP value
Ethnicity0.310.990.380.15
 Asian vs Maori/Pacific−0.240.870.030.820.510.72
 European vs Maori/Pacific0.560.430.010.430.730.37
Age−0.000020.000020.22−0.000050.000020.97−0.000020.000020.37−0.000020.000020.18
Cause of eye loss0.770.480.860.35
 Accident vs medical0.190.340.080.33−0.020.270.390.28
 Congenital vs medical0.380.600.700.590.230.480.460.50
Frequency of cleaning−0.720.18<0.0001−0.270.170.11−0.440.140.002−0.360.150.02
Hand washing before removal−0.030.170.860.180.170.280.100.140.46−0.010.150.93
Years wearing a prosthesis−0.010.010.21−0.0240.0080.006−0.010.010.33−0.020.010.01
Age of current prosthesis−0.010.020.720.020.020.260.0040.010.740.010.010.45

Frequency of discharge

There was strong evidence of an association of frequency of cleaning with frequency of discharge (P < 0.0001) with those cleaning less often reporting a lower frequency of discharge. No other variables could be shown to be associated with frequency of discharge.

Color of discharge

There was strong evidence of an association between period of prosthetic eye wear and color of discharge (P = 0.006) with those who had had their prosthetic eye longer reporting a less colored discharge. There was also evidence of an association of age with discharge color with older people reporting a less colored discharge. No other variables could be shown to be associated with the color of discharge.

Volume of discharge

There was strong evidence of an association of frequency of cleaning with volume of discharge (P = 0.002) with those cleaning less often reporting a lower volume of discharge. No other variables could be shown to be associated with volume of discharge.

Viscosity of discharge

There was evidence of an association of frequency of cleaning with viscosity of discharge (P = 0.02) with those cleaning less often having a lower viscosity of discharge score. There was also evidence of longer periods of prosthetic eye wear being associated with viscosity with longer time having a lower viscosity score. No other variables could be shown to be associated with viscosity of discharge.

Professional repolishing regimes

Fifty-one percent of the participants had their prosthetic eyes repolished every year, 9% more often than yearly, and 40% less often. When asked directly “Does having your prosthetic eye(s) professionally repolished improve discharge? (Yes or No),” 44% of wearers reported no improvement. When asked directly, “If yes, how long does the improvement last,” 18% said that the improvement lasted less than 1 month, 20% that the improvement lasted between 1 and 6 months, and 5% that the improvement lasted longer than 6 months. Fourteen percent were unsure (Figure 3).
Figure 3

The duration of the effect on discharge experience of professional repolishing.

Discussion

The survey of ocularists’ Web sites revealed that the cause of discharge has not been settled. The largest group believed that the main cause was the buildup of surface deposits on prosthetic eyes, but the sites appear to contradict this with a majority (82%) recommending that prosthetic eyes (with deposits) (a) never be removed and cleaned or (b) only be removed and cleaned if causing discomfort or discharge. Osborn and Hettler surveyed members of the American Society of Ocularists in 2007 and found that 31% recommended to patients that they remove and clean their prosthesis “whenever the socket felt irritated,” 25% recommended monthly removal, and 22% recommended that their prosthesis be removed “whenever it is dirty.” They noted that further studies need to be conducted so a consensus can be achieved by ocularists and a standardized set of treatment protocols developed.2 The website of the UK National Health Service (NHS) National Prosthetic Eye Service20 advises patients to remove and clean their prosthetic eyes at least once every 30 days, but daily cleaning or several times daily cleaning is also recommended if there is a lot of discharge. Their recommended cleaning method is to rub the prosthesis gently with the fingers using warm water and mild nonscented soap. The NHS website suggests that cleaning the prosthetic eye removes the main cause of discharge, which is a buildup of dirt and dust from the environment. This advice may be compared with the opinion of LeGrand21 that a “properly designed, perfectly polished prosthesis is all that is required for total comfort with no excess secretions. Such a prosthesis need only be removed once each year for professional cleaning to remove natural deposits and restore its polished surface.” These two differing recommendations appear to be based on different assumptions. The UK recommendation suggests that cleaning is most important in managing discharge. LeGrand states that the most important factors in managing discharge are proper design (undefined in his paper) and finish of the surface of the prosthesis. The literature has paid limited attention to the problem of discharge. Vasquez and Linberg22 and Kim et al23 found that there were bacteriologic and cytologic differences between anophthalmic and natural sockets but that these differences were not found to be associated with symptoms of discharge. In 1983, Jones and Collin24 classified the causes of discharging sockets. They associated acute discharge with viral or bacterial conjunctivitis. Chronic discharge with recurrent symptoms often did not respond to topical antibiotics so causes other than infection were implicated. Their classification achieved its aim of allowing more accurate diagnosis of infections but left open the question of effective treatment for ongoing discharge problems. Allen et al25 found that patients with noteworthy problems had only half as much basic tear secretion in their anophthalmic sockets as those without problems. They suggested that aqueous or oily prosthetic lubricants might be of value. Fett et al26 evaluated the need for additional lubrication in 200 anophthalmic patients and found that 23% required supplementation. However, neither Allen nor Fett directly linked low basic tear production or the use of prosthetic lubrication with the discharge problem. Deposit formation on contact lens materials has been investigated,27,28 but that work has not yet been extended to prosthetic eyes. Table 3 presents a summary of the putative causes of discharge noted in the above literature together with patients’ comments about discharge taken from a survey of 63 anophthalmic patients in 2009.1 A limitation of this study was that many of the causes noted in Table 3 (for example, socket and eyelid problems or unsuitable prostheses) were not investigated. Discharge was likely to be more severe in the presence of these problems.
Table 3

Putative causes of mucoid discharge summarized from ocularists’ websites, formal literature, and subjective comments from patients in a previous study

Specific causes
Viral or bacterial infectionsCommon cold, etc
Environmental allergensPollens, dust mites, etc
Irritants in the socketDust, stray eye lashes, smoke-filled rooms, etc
Eye stressNight driving, reading, computers, etc
Drying conditionsWind, air conditioners, etc
Clinical interventionImpression taking, etc
Damaging behaviorExcessive rubbing of prosthesis, etc
Nonspecific causes
Physical irritation from prosthesisSize, surface finish, surface deposits, weight, material and manufacturing process, etc
Deposits on prosthesisProtein, dirt, etc
Shape and fit of prosthesisPooling of secretions in the socket
Removal regimeDaily, monthly, never
Cleaning agentsSoap, detergents
Socket hygieneContamination from fingers and eyelids
Lacrimal systemDefective tear production and drainageInfective focus (dacryocystitis)
Anatomical limitationsPoor lid closure, grafted tissue, scarring, etc
Medical conditionsUnwell, side effects from drugs
Orbital implantExtrusion, conjunctival inclusion cysts, granulomaInfective focus (blepharitis, meibomianitis)
Cytological featuresSquamous metaplasia
Patient demographicsAge, life style, etc
Vasquez and Linberg22 did not investigate hand-washing behavior, but hand washing may have been a factor in their additional finding that patients who frequently manipulated their prosthesis had a significantly higher proportion of Gram-negative bacteria in the conjunctiva of their sockets. Whether wearers hand washed or not and in line with Vasquez and Linberg, this study found no evidence of an association of hand washing with discharge experience. The finding that more frequent removal and cleaning was associated with more discharge does not indicate the direction of the effect as wearers who experience discharge are likely to clean their prosthesis more frequently than those who have no discharge. This is borne out with frequent cleaners citing discharge as the reason they cleaned more often than infrequent cleaners. Clearly, having an uncomfortable and/or discharging socket is motivation to remove and clean the prosthetic eye frequently. However, this behavior could mask the problem for a number of wearers if frequent cleaning was contributing to the discharge in the first place. Evidence about the cause of discharge may be found by investigating the physical interface between the prosthesis and the conjunctiva. Present at this interface are the physical, chemical, and biological elements of the conjunctiva, the socket fluids, and the deposits that cover the prosthetic eye. The association between longer periods of prosthetic eye wear and less colored and viscous discharge may indicate that the socket accommodates prosthetic eyes better over time. However period of wear was not shown to affect frequency and volume of discharge, which are more important characteristics for wearing comfort. The finding that older people are likely to have discharge with less color may be of value to future researchers investigating discharge. Annual repolishing of prosthetic eyes is recommended by a large majority of ocularists, and 60% of wearers undertook repolishing at least this often. It was surprising to find that wearers in this study thought that professional repolishing did not have any significant effect on their discharge experience because it is commonly assumed that a clean smooth surface on the prosthetic eye is paramount. When asked directly whether repolishing improved discharge, 62% of wearers reported no improvement or that any improvement lasted less than 1 month. This result suggests that professional repolishing may play only a minor part in reducing discharge and that personal removal and cleaning regimes are more important. There appears to be no consensus among practitioners for treatment of mucoid discharge associated with prosthetic eye wear, and there remains a large and underinvestigated group of patients with nonspecific discharge for which many causes of discharge have been postulated. Further research is warranted because prosthetic eye wearers ranked discharge as the second most important concern after health of their remaining eye.1 We have taken initial steps to investigate the discharge issue with this retrospective study and have found as expected that more severe discharge was associated with frequent removal and cleaning. Personal removal and cleaning regimes appear to be more important than professional repolishing, which appeared to have limited impact on discharge experience. Further research into the socket’s response to prosthetic eye wear, including the physical, chemical, and biological elements of the conjunctiva, the socket fluids, and the deposits that cover the prosthetic eye is recommended.
  9 in total

1.  A survey of recommendations on the care of ocular prostheses.

Authors:  Katherine L Osborn; Debbie Hettler
Journal:  Optometry       Date:  2010-03

2.  A classification and review the causes of discharging sockets.

Authors:  C A Jones; J R Collin
Journal:  Trans Ophthalmol Soc U K       Date:  1983

3.  Concerns of anophthalmic patients wearing artificial eyes.

Authors:  Keith Pine; Brian Sloan; Joanna Stewart; Robert J Jacobs
Journal:  Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2011-01       Impact factor: 4.207

4.  Imaging protein deposits on contact lens materials.

Authors:  Jonathan H Teichroeb; James A Forrest; Valentina Ngai; James W Martin; Lyndon Jones; John Medley
Journal:  Optom Vis Sci       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 1.973

5.  Evaluation of lubricants for the prosthetic eye wearer.

Authors:  D R Fett; R Scott; A M Putterman
Journal:  Ophthalmic Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 1.746

6.  Artificial eyes and tear measurements.

Authors:  L Allen; H E Kolder; E M Bulgarelli; D M Bulgarelli
Journal:  Ophthalmology       Date:  1980-02       Impact factor: 12.079

7.  Fluorescence assay for measuring lipid deposits on contact lens surfaces.

Authors:  C H Ho; V Hlady
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  1995-04       Impact factor: 12.479

8.  Conjunctival cytologic features in anophthalmic patients wearing an ocular prosthesis.

Authors:  Jong Hyun Kim; Min Joung Lee; Ho-Kyung Choung; Nam Ju Kim; Sang-won Hwang; Mi Sun Sung; Sang In Khwarg
Journal:  Ophthalmic Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  2008 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.746

9.  The anophthalmic socket and the prosthetic eye. A clinical and bacteriologic study.

Authors:  R J Vasquez; J V Linberg
Journal:  Ophthalmic Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  1989       Impact factor: 1.746

  9 in total
  12 in total

1.  Concerns of anophthalmic patients-a comparison between cryolite glass and polymethyl methacrylate prosthetic eye wearers.

Authors:  Alexander C Rokohl; Konrad R Koch; Werner Adler; Marc Trester; Wolfgang Trester; Nicola S Pine; Keith R Pine; Ludwig M Heindl
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2018-03-03       Impact factor: 3.117

2.  Study of conjunctival flora in anophthalmic patients: influence on the comfort of the socket.

Authors:  Alvaro Toribio; Teresa Marrodán; Isabel Fernández-Natal; Honorina Martínez-Blanco; Leandro Rodríguez-Aparicio; Miguel Á Ferrero
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2017-06-10       Impact factor: 3.117

3.  Evaluating the Color Stability of Ocular Prosthesis after Immersion in Three Different Immersion Media: An In Vitro Study.

Authors:  Seema Sathe Kambala; Deepika Rathi; Anjali Borle; K Rajanikanth; Tanvi Jaiswal; Mithilesh Dhamande
Journal:  J Int Soc Prev Community Dent       Date:  2020-04-14

4.  The UK National Artificial Eye Questionnaire Study: predictors of artificial eye wearers' experience Part 2 - visual function and quality of life.

Authors:  Yinon Shapira; Emma Worrell; Andre S Litwin; Raman Malhotra
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2021-03-01       Impact factor: 3.775

5.  Measuring quality of care and life in patients with an ocular prosthesis.

Authors:  Sébastien Ruiters; Stéphan De Jong; Ilse Mombaerts
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2021-02-06       Impact factor: 3.117

6.  Deposit buildup on prosthetic eye material (in vitro) and its effect on surface wettability.

Authors:  Keith Raymond Pine; Brian Sloan; Kyuyeon Ivy Han; Simon Swift; Robert John Jacobs
Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol       Date:  2013-02-13

7.  The UK National Artificial Eye Questionnaire study: predictors of artificial eye wearers' experience part 1-comfort and satisfaction.

Authors:  Yinon Shapira; Emma Worrell; Andre S Litwin; Raman Malhotra
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2020-10-26       Impact factor: 4.456

8.  Discharge and infection in retinoblastoma post-enucleation sockets.

Authors:  Daphne L Mourits; Dyonne T Hartong; Andries E Budding; Machteld I Bosscha; H Stevie Tan; Annette C Moll
Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol       Date:  2017-03-01

9.  Deposit buildup on prosthetic eyes and implications for conjunctival inflammation and mucoid discharge.

Authors:  Keith Raymond Pine; Brian Sloan; Robert John Jacobs
Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol       Date:  2012-10-31

10.  Anxiety and depression in patients wearing prosthetic eyes.

Authors:  Ludwig M Heindl; Marc Trester; Yongwei Guo; Florian Zwiener; Narges Sadat; Nicola S Pine; Keith R Pine; Andreas Traweger; Alexander C Rokohl
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-09-01       Impact factor: 3.117

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