Literature DB >> 32533628

Endophthalmitis after strabismus surgery: incidence and outcome in relation to age, operated eye muscle, surgical technique, scleral perforation and immune state.

Huibert J Simonsz1, Tina Rutar2, Stephen Kraft3, Alberta A H J Thiadens1, Manou R Batstra4, Robert M Verdijk5, Karin U Loeffler6, Guntram Kommerell7.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Identify risk factors for endophthalmitis after strabismus surgery (EASS) and relate these to incidence and outcome.
METHODS: Ophthalmologists, who had operated, diagnosed or treated EASS, completed a case record form with 71 questions in six domains: Preoperative, Surgery, Perforation, Postoperative, Outcome and Experts' opinion. To estimate the age-specific incidence per number of strabismus operations in the Netherlands during 1994-2013, the age distribution of Dutch cases was compared with the age-specific rates of strabismus surgery in the Dutch Registry of Strabismus Operations and with population data. Exploratory data analysis was performed. The immune state was evaluated in six patients. Five enucleated eyes were studied histopathologically.
RESULTS: None of the 26 patients (27 eyes with EASS) were between 9 and 65 years old, except for one patient with retinal haemorrhage followed by endophthalmitis. In the Netherlands during 1994-2013, the rate of EASS was approximately one per 11 000 strabismus operations, but one per 4300 for children aged 0-3 and one per 1000 for patients 65 and older. Endophthalmitis was diagnosed on postoperative day 1-4 in children aged 0-3. In all 15 children aged 0-5, the 16 affected eyes were phthisical, eviscerated or enucleated. The involved eye muscle had been recessed in 25 of 27 cases. It was a medial rectus in 15 of 16 children aged 0-6. It was a lateral (6), inferior (2) or medial (1) rectus in elderly. Scleral perforation went unnoticed in all children (no record in three) and in two of seven elderly (no record in two). Histopathology showed transscleral scarring compatible with scleral perforation in four patients but, in a two-year-old girl who had EASS together with a transient medial rectus palsy, the sclera underneath the former suture tract was not perforated but did contain the long posterior ciliary artery.
CONCLUSIONS: Endophthalmitis after strabismus surgery (EASS) affects children and elderly, with a grave outcome in young children. It occurs after recession of the medial rectus muscle in children, and it may occur without scleral perforation. Age and perforation influence many other parameters that determine the occurrence and fulminance of EASS.
© 2020 Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica Foundation. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  antisepsis; bacterial carrier state; complication; endophthalmitis; enucleation; immune deficiency; scleral perforation; strabismus surgery; surgical contamination

Year:  2020        PMID: 32533628     DOI: 10.1111/aos.14446

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1755-375X            Impact factor:   3.761


  2 in total

1.  Incidence of infectious complications following strabismus surgery.

Authors:  Hwan Heo; Won Yeol Ryu; Arthika Chandramohan; Scott R Lambert
Journal:  J AAPOS       Date:  2022-04-15       Impact factor: 1.325

2.  Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes in 314 Japanese Patients with Bacterial Endophthalmitis: A Multicenter Cohort Study from J-CREST.

Authors:  Hiroto Ishikawa; Kazutaka Uchida; Yoshio Takesue; Junya Mori; Takamasa Kinoshita; Shohei Morikawa; Fumiki Okamoto; Tomoko Sawada; Masahito Ohji; Takayuki Kanda; Masaru Takeuchi; Akiko Miki; Sentaro Kusuhara; Tetsuo Ueda; Nahoko Ogata; Masahiko Sugimoto; Mineo Kondo; Shigeo Yoshida; Tadahiko Ogata; Kazuhiro Kimura; Yoshinori Mitamura; Tatsuya Jujo; Hitoshi Takagi; Hiroto Terasaki; Taiji Sakamoto; Takaaki Sugisawa; Yuki Komuku; Fumi Gomi
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2021-03-24
  2 in total

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