| Literature DB >> 27009616 |
Sumita Phatak1, Careen Lowder2, Carlos Pavesio3,4.
Abstract
Cataract is one of the most common and visually debilitating complications of pediatric uveitis. It develops as a consequence of chronic inflammation and steroid use and is seen most often in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)-associated uveitis. Cataract extraction with intraocular lens (IOL) insertion has been carried out with a measure of success in non-uveitic pediatric eyes, but in cases of uveitis, multiple factors affect the final outcome. Chronic inflammation and its sequelae such as band keratopathy, posterior synechiae, and cyclitic membranes make surgical intervention more challenging and outcome less certain. Postoperative complications like increased inflammation, glaucoma, posterior capsular opacification, retrolental membranes, and hypotony may compromise the visual outcome. Early refractive correction is imperative in pediatric eyes to prevent amblyopia. The use of contact lenses and intraocular lenses in pediatric uveitic eyes were fraught with complications in the past. Surgical interventions such as vitreo-lensectomy followed by contact lens fitting and small incision cataract surgery followed by different types of intraocular lenses have been utilized, and many reports have been published, albeit in small patient groups. This review analyzes and discusses the existing literature on intraocular lens implantation in cases of pediatric uveitic cataract surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic uveitis; Complicated cataract; Intraocular lenses; Pediatric uveitis; Uveitic cataract
Year: 2016 PMID: 27009616 PMCID: PMC4805676 DOI: 10.1186/s12348-016-0079-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Cataract surgery in uveitic eyes and the use of intraocular lenses: comparison of major studies in literature
| Sources | No. of patients | Etiology | Age at presentation of Ds in years (median) | Age at Cataract surgery (years) | PCIOL (in the bag) (n =eyes) | Aphakia (n=eyes) | Complications (n=eyes) | Immunosuppression | Follow-up | Comments | Visual outcome pseudophakia (n=eyes) | Visual outcome aphakia (n=eyes) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Probst and Holland [ | 7 (8 eyes) | JIA | Adults (5) | PMMA | Glaucoma (4), PCO (5) | Steroids | 16.6 months | All >20/40 | ||||
| Lundvall and Zetterstrom [ | 7 (10 eyes) | JIA | 3.5–10 | HSM-PMMA 10 | Glaucoma (7), PCO (5), 2nd Sx for membranes (8) | Steroids, methotrexate | 28 months | Uveitis controlled | 20/20–20/50(8) <20/50(2) | |||
| BenEzra and Cohen [ | 17 (20 eyes) | JIA (8) | 4–17 | 10 PMMA (7), diffractive (3) | 7 | Glaucoma (4), PS (3), CME (3) | Steroids | 60 months | In U/L, CL poorly tolerated, JIA results guarded, uveitis active | JRA | JRA | |
| Lam et al.[ | 5 (6 eyes) | JIA (5) | 8.5 | 7–12 | 6 PMMA (4), HSM-PMMA (1), acrylic hydrophobic (1) | PCO (6), glaucoma (2), CME (1) | Methotrexate | 43.5 months | Uveitis controlled | ALL >20/40 | ||
| Nemet et al. [ | 18 (19 eyes) | JIA (10), non-JIA (9) | JIA (0.9–14) Non-JIA (4.6–17) | JIA (11.8+/−4.6), non-JIA (17.1+/−4.5) | PMMA (7), acrylic hydrophobic (11), acrylic hydrophilic (1) | PCO (10), glaucoma (4), CME (1), 2nd Sx (11) | Steroids, methotrexate, | 45 months | No difference in visual outcome in both groups | >20/40 (13) | ||
| Quinones et al. [ | 34 (48 eyes) | JIA (27), non-JIA (13) | 6.7 (4–16) | 9.8 (4–17) | 13 PMMA | 28 | Glaucoma (3), PCO (4), RD (3), CME (4), membranes (2) | Steroids, methotrexate | 0.3–15.7 years | Uveitis controlled, | 92 % improved | >20/40 (9) |
| Sijssens [ | 29 (48 eyes) | JIA | 4.4 | 6.3 aphakia, 7.6 pseudophakia | 29 acrylic 24, PMMA 5 | 19 | Ocular HTN, glaucoma, CME, | Methotrexate | 7 years | Uveitis controlled, | >20/40 (25) | >20/40 (13) |
| Terrada et al. [ | 16 (22 eyes) | JIA (9), non-JIA (7) | 5 years | 9.5 (median) | 22 HSM-PMMA | PCO (2), glaucoma (4), CME (3) | Methotrexate, azathioprine | 6.2 years | Uveitis controlled | 0.3 or better, log MAR |
HTN hypertension, CME cystoid macular edema, RD retinal detachment, PS posterior synechiae, Sx surgery