| Literature DB >> 30581605 |
Piotr Kanclerz1, Andrzej Grzybowski2,3.
Abstract
Intraocular gases have been used in vitreoretinal surgery for over 40 years. The aim of this study was to review the complications related to the use of expandable gases in vitrectomy and their management. A PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Embase search was conducted using the terms "intraocular gas" and "vitrectomy for retinal detachment." Of the articles retrieved by this method, all publications in English and abstracts of non-English publications were reviewed. Intraocular pressure elevation was reported in up to 58.9% patients after vitrectomy with expandable gas administration for retinal detachment. Vitreoretinal surgery is known to induce cataract development. With that, cataract progression is associated with lens exposure to intraocular gas, the duration of such exposure, patient's age, and the magnitude of vitreous removal. With intraocular gas, the posterior surface of the lens becomes a strongly refractive factor, resulting in high myopia and temporary vision impairment. Other complications related to the use of expandable gases include anterior chamber and subconjunctival gas displacement. Single reports on subretinal and cranial gas migration were published. In vitrectomy for uncomplicated retinal detachments, attempts to shift from expandable gases towards air are observed. Nevertheless, gas tamponade remains a reasonable choice for patients suffering from retinal detachment.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30581605 PMCID: PMC6276446 DOI: 10.1155/2018/8606494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2090-004X Impact factor: 1.909
The incidence of raised intraocular pressure after vitrectomy with gas tamponade.
| Author | Incidence of IOP elevation (%) | Definition of IOP elevation | Type of surgical intervention | Gas | Risk factors for IOP elevation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abrams et al. [ | 45 | ≥30 mmHg in the early postoperative period | PPV with SF6 to reform soft eyes | SF6 20–100% | Eyes with postoperative fibrinous anterior chamber exudates, 100% gas concentration |
| Chang et al. [ | 58.9 | >22 mmHg within the first postoperative week | PPV for complicated retinal detachment | C2F6–C3F8 in various concentrations | N/A |
| The Silicone Study Group [ | 8.7 | ≥30 mmHg at any postoperative visit | PPV in eyes with proliferative vitreoretinopathy and prior vitrectomy | C3F8 14% | N/A |
| The Silicone Study Group [ | 6.1 | ≥30 mmHg at any postoperative visit | PPV in eyes with proliferative vitreoretinopathy and prior vitrectomy | SF6 20% | N/A |
| Wong et al. [ | 21.7 | >30 mmHg on postoperative Day-1 | PPV with or without phacoemulsification cataract surgery | C3F8 16% | N/A |
| Wong et al. [ | 20.4 | >30 mmHg on postoperative Day-1 | PPV with or without phacoemulsification cataract surgery | SF6 30% | N/A |
| Chen and Thompson [ | 43 | >25 mmHg in early postoperative period | PPV with or without scleral buckling | SF6 10–30% or C3F8 5%–35% | Increasing patient age; expansile gas concentrations; use of C3F8; circumferential scleral buckles |
| Chen [ | 52 | >30 mmHg within 1 week after surgery | PPV for macular hole surgery | C3F8 14% | N/A |
| Mittra et al. [ | 52.4 (>25 mmHg) 28.6 (>30 mmHg) | Elevation 4–6 hours postoperatively | PPV | SF6 18%–20% or C3F8 12%–16% | N/A |
| Wong et al. [ | 0.5–1.3 | N/A | Vitreoretinal surgery | N/A | N/A |
Abbreviations: IOP, intraocular pressure; PPV, pars plana vitrectomy. The study by Wong et al. [5] presenting the incidence of IOP elevation in all vitreoretinal procedures is presented for comparative purposes.