| Literature DB >> 30359246 |
Choul Yong Park1, Jimmy K Lee2, Roy S Chuck3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Toxic anterior segment syndrome (TASS) can be a rare complication of anterior segment surgery. Here we reviewed the most recent advances in the understanding of TASS.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior chamber; Cataract; Inflammation; TASS; Toxic
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30359246 PMCID: PMC6203205 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-018-0939-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Fig. 1Flow chart to show the studies included in this review
Summary of 15 recent case reports of toxic anterior segment syndrome
| First Author (ref. no.) | Number of cases | Onset (days after the surgery) | Inciting agents | Clinical presentations | Managements (n) | Visual outcomes (n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miyake et al. [ | 6 | 42–167 | IOL (ISert model 251, Hoya) | Chemosis, | Vitretomy and IOL removal (1), | BCVA 20/100 (1), |
| Suzuki et al. [ | 251 | 38.44 ± 32.29 Range:0–161 | IOL (ISert model 251 and 255, Hoya) | Anterior chamber reaction (99.2%), conjunctival injection (41.4%) | Medical treatment only (142), | BCVA |
| Sorenson et al. [ | 10 | 1–7 | Bacterial biofilm contamination of autoclave reservoir | Anterior chamber reaction (10), | Medical treatment only (3), | No light perception (1), |
| Ohika et al. [ | 147 | 13.1 ± 16.4 Range: 1–88 | IOL (Acrysof, Alcon) | Anterior chamber reaction (97.2%), | Medical treatment only (104), | BCVA> 20/40 (143), |
| Moyle et al. [ | 11 | 1 | unknown | Corneal edema (11), anterior chamber reaction (10), | Medical treatment only (11) | BCVA = 20/20 (11) |
| Sengupta et al. [ | 60 | 1 | Balanced salt solution with a low pH of 6.0 (12), OVD (17), unknown (31) | Severe iridocyclitis with varying degree of corneal edema (60) | Medical treatment only (56), | BCVA: 0.11 ± 0.1 logMAR, range: 0–0.3 logMAR |
| Matsou et al. [ | 5 | 1 | Generic trypan blue | Painless blurry vision, corneal edema, anterior chamber reaction, hypopyon and fibrin reaction | Medical treatment only (5) | BCVA: 0.82 ± 0.18 (Snellen acuity) |
| Bielory et al. [ | 2 | 1 | intracameral lidocaine HCl 1% and phenylephrine 2.5% inadvertently preserved with 10% benzalkonium chloride. | Acute corneal decompensation (3) | Medical treatment only (1), | BCVA = 20/20 (1), |
| Althomali [ | 15 | 1–2 | OVD | Corneal edema (15), | Medical treatment only | BCVA: count finger (2) (other retina pathology), |
| Koban et al. [ | 1 | 1 | Inadvertent overdose of intracameral gentamicin | Hyphema, corneal edema, chemosis, hemorrhagic fibrinous reaction, | Penetrating keratoplasty after medical treatment | BCVA: 20/60 |
| Cetinkaya et al. [ | 5 | 1 | unknown | corneal edema (5), anterior chamber reaction (5), fibrin (3), hypopyon (3), increased intraocular pressure (3) | Penetrating keratoplasty (2) | BCVA: 20/100 (1), |
| Ari et al. [ | 19 (pediatric patients) | 1–2 | Ethylene oxide gas sterilization | Corneal edema, anterior chamber reaction, | Medical treatment only (18), | NA |
| Buzard et al. [ | 2 | 1 | Generic trypan blue | Cornea edema, anterior chamber reaction, hypopyon | Penetrating keratoplasty (2) | NA |
| Maier et al. [ | 24 | 1–2 | Contamination of corneal trephine | Graft infiltration, corneal stromal edema | Medical treatment only (24) | NA |
| Choi et al. [ | 15 | NA | Ethylene oxide gas sterilization | Corneal edema, anterior chamber reaction, conjunctival injection, pupil irregularity, fibrin reaction | Penetrating keratoplasty (5) | BCVA≥20/200 (14), |
IOL intraocular lens, BCVA best corrected visual acuity, NA not available, n case number
Clinical manifestation of toxic anterior segment syndrome in large-scale outbreak studies
| Clinical manifestation | Suzuki et al. [ | Oshika et al. [ | Endophthalmitis vitrectomy study [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Onset after surgery (day) | 38.44 ± 32.29 days | 13.1 ± 16.4 days | 6 days |
| Pain | NA | 9.5% | 74.3% |
| Blurred vision | NA | NA | 94.3% |
| Lid swelling | NA | NA | 34.5% |
| Injection and/or chemosis | 41.4% | 39.8% | 82.1% |
| Corneal edema | 19.1% | 15.6% | NA |
| Anterior chamber fibrin reaction or membrane formation | 26.7% | 43.1% | NA |
| Anterior chamber cell and/or flare | 99.2% | Cells (97.2%), flare (63.0) | NA |
| Hypopyon | 22.7% | 10.6% | 85.7% |
| Keratic precipitates | 27.9% | 21.6% | NA |
| Anterior vitreous opacities | 21.5% | 23.8% | NA |
| Media opacity | NA | NA | 99.5% |
| Red reflex present | NA | NA | 32.0% |
| Macular edema or other retinal abnormalities | NA | 3.8% | NA |
NA not available
The last column refers clinical manifestation of endophthalmitis for the comparative purpose
Fig. 2Sample algorithm for the prevention and investigation of TASS
Recommendations for cleaning and sterilizing intraocular surgical instruments modified from the guideline proposed by ASCRS, AAO and ASORN [44]
| Ensure adequate time for thorough cleaning and sterilization of instrument | |
| •Rigorous adherence to recommended procedures for cleaning and sterilization | |
| Follow manufacturer’s directions for use for cleaning and sterilization | |
| Ophthalmic viscosurgical device solutions should not be allowed to dry on instruments | |
| •Instruments should be rinsed with sterile water immediately following the use | |
| Used instruments should be transported from the operating room in a closed container to the decontamination area | |
| Whenever possible, use disposable instruments and/or tubing and then discard after each use. | |
| •Do not reuse devices labeled for single use only. | |
| Clean intraocular instruments separately from non-intraocular surgical instruments. | |
| Avoid using enzymatic detergents for the cleaning of intraocular instruments. | |
| •When the use of enzymatic detergents is necessary, instruments should be thoroughly rinsed with copious volumes of water to remove all detergent. | |
| Ultrasonic cleaners should be emptied, cleaned, disinfected, rinsed and dried at least daily and preferably after each use. | |
| Do not reuse manual cleaning tools unless designed for reuse. | |
| •If brushes are reused, they should be designed for reuse and cleaned and treated with high-level disinfection or sterilization, preferably after each use, or at least once daily. | |
| Rinsing should provide flow of water through or over instruments and agitation in a basin of water should not be used. | |
| •Following thorough rinsing, instruments with lumens should be dried with forced or compressed air. | |
| If reusable woven materials are used for draping or wrapping trays or instruments, they should be laundered thoroughly between each use to eliminate surgical compounds, debris, and cleaning agents. | |
| Cleanliness and integrity of instruments should be verified. | |
| Sterilization | |
| •Glutaraldehyde is not recommended because of the toxicity of glutaraldehyde residues. | |
| Have a written policy in place for protocols for what happens to the instruments prior to and after each case in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions. |