| Literature DB >> 30202602 |
Niroj Kumar Sahoo1, Pasyanthi Balijepalli2, Sumit Randhir Singh1, Mahima Jhingan3, Sirisha Senthil2, Jay Chhablani1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The close structural and microcirculatory co-relation between anterior and posterior segments of eye make them very vulnerable to complications when one of them is affected surgically. With the advent of anti-fibrotic agents in the management of glaucoma, the rates of vitreoretinal complications have become more frequent. MAIN BODY: Common retinal complications after glaucoma surgeries include choroidal detachment; ocular decompression retinopathy; haemorrhagic choroidal detachment; hypotony maculopathy; malignant glaucoma; vitreous haemorrhage; bleb endophthalmitis; retinal detachment. Similarly, intraocular pressure rise is often noted after scleral buckle; pars plana vitrectomy; intravitreal gas injection; silicone oil injection; intravitreal steroid injection.Entities:
Keywords: Filtration surgery; Glaucoma; Glaucoma after retinal surgeries; Retinal complications
Year: 2018 PMID: 30202602 PMCID: PMC6124013 DOI: 10.1186/s40942-018-0135-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Retina Vitreous ISSN: 2056-9920
Summary of complications following retinal and glaucoma surgeries
| Conditions | Articles | Type of article | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Ocular decompression retinopathy (ODR) | Fechner et al. [ | Original article | Coined the term ocular decompression retinopathy |
| Arévalo et al. [ | Original article | ODR occurred after trabeculectomy (4 eyes), phacomulsification (3 eyes), Ahmed valve placement (1 eye), silicone oil removal (1 eye) and vitrectomy (1 eye) | |
| Li et al. [ | Case report | ODR following canaloplasty | |
| Serous choroidal detachment (CD) | Investigators A. (AGIS) [ | Original article | Incidence of 7.9–50% after penetrating glaucoma surgeries |
| De Gregorio et al.[ | Original article | CD following Xen Gel Stent | |
| Bakir and Pasquale [ | Review article | Anti-metabolites as a risk factor | |
| Suprachoroidal haemorrhage (SCH) | Tuli et al. [ | Original article | Incidence is around 0.6–1.5% after trabeculectomy and around 0.5–8.3% after tube shunt procedures |
| Hypotony maculopathy | Fannin et al. [ | Original article | Incidence is 1.3–20% after glaucoma filtering surgery |
| Schlenker et al. [ | Original article | Occurs following MIGS | |
| Malignant glaucoma | Simmons [ | Review article | Incidence of 0.4–6% of cases after penetrating glaucoma surgeries |
| Schlenker et al. [ | Original article | Following Xen gel stent | |
| Vitreous haemorrhage | Law et al. [ | Original article | Seen in 5% of patients after aqueous shunt implantation |
| Schlenker et al. [ | Original article | Following Xen gel stent | |
| Endophthalmitis | Ang et al. [ | Original article | Incidence of 0.12–1.3%, |
| Busbee et al. [ | Original article | Prompt vitrectomy is considered more beneficial than tap and injections even when presenting vision is better than hand movement | |
| Retinal detachment | Waterhouse et al. [ | Original article | Incidence of 5% following Molteno tube implantation |
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| |||
| Scleral buckle | Perez et al. [ | Original article | Incidence of angle closure glaucoma is 1.4–4.4% |
| Pavlin et al. [ | Original article | Supraciliary fluid with increased ciliary body thickness in 80% eyes following buckle | |
| Hayreh (1973) | Original article | Glaucoma following anterior segment ischemia | |
| Sidoti et al. [ | Original article | 85% success rate with the placement of silicone tube in between the buckle and the overlying capsule after incising the capsule over the buckle at the apex | |
| Smith et al. [ | Original article | Krupin Denver implant and trimmed Baerveldt implants (success rates of 82 and 73% at 1 and 2 years respectively) | |
| Scott et al. [ | Original article | Baerveldt implants with intact plate successfully reduces IOP | |
| Pars plana vitrectomy | Chang [ | Original article | Incidence between 11.6 and 20% |
| Koreen et al. [ | Original article | Lens extraction as a major risk factor | |
| Inoue et al. [ | Original article | Success rate of trabeculectomy with Mitomycin-C is 55.1% at 1 year, and 43.1% at 3 years | |
| Intravitreal gas injection | Vitrectomy with silicone oil or sulfur hexafluoride gas in eyes with severe proliferative vitreoretinopathy: results of a randomized clinical trial. Silicone Study Report 1 and 2 | Original article | Incidence of high IOP following injection of 20% SF6 and 14% C3F8 was found to be 6.1 and 18% respectively |
| Silicone oil injection | Honavar et al. [ | Original article | Incidence of glaucoma after silicone oil injection ranges from 4.8 to 48% |
| Honavar et al. [ | Original article | Pre existing glaucoma, diabetes mellitus, aphakia, rubeosis iridis, silicone oil in the anterior chamber and high IOP on first post operative day are positive risk factors whereas anatomic failure and myopia as negative risk factors for the development of glaucoma | |
| Nguyen et al. [ | Original article | 60% success rate with Molteno implant | |
| Intravitreal steroid injection | Kiddee et al. [ | Systematic review | Incidence has been reported to be as high as 11–79%. |
| Kiddee et al. [ | Systematic review | IOP rise in 32% cases after 4 mg intravitreal triamcinolone, 66 and 79% following 0.59 and 2.1 mg fluocinolone implant, respectively, and 11 and 15% after 0.35 and 0.7 mg dexamethasone implant, respectively | |
| Ricci et al. [ | Original article | ALT seems to be effective in reducing IOP | |
| Rubin et al. [ | Original article | SLT lowered (P < 0.007) IOP in 5 eyes of 7 patients with steroid-induced increased IOP from 3 weeks to 6 months postoperative | |
Fig. 1Retinal complications after glaucoma surgery: ultrasound B-scan showing supra-choroidal haemorrhage (a); blebitis with hypopyon (b); fundus image in endophthalmitis (c); ultrasound biomicroscopic (UBM) image showing anterior rotation of ciliary body in malignant glaucoma (arrow) (d), cilio-choroidal detachment (arrow-head) (e); fundus image showing choroidal detachment (f); red free image showing retinal folds in hypotony maculopathy (g)
Fig. 2Glaucoma after retinal surgeries: slit lamp photographs showing silicone oil in anterior chamber (a), inverse hypopyon (b), neovascularisation of iris (arrow) in a patient with neovascular glaucoma (c)