DS with the uveoscleral implant is a safe and effective procedure to lower IOP in open angle glaucoma patients. IOP reduction is maintained over 2 years and is correlated to the postoperative height of the intrascleral bleb. Supraciliary implantation reduces intrascleral lake dependency, being a simultaneous drainage alternative to the subconjunctival pathway.
Purpose:
This study aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of same-site Deep Sclerectomy (DS) re-operation with subconjunctival and subscleral collagen matrix (Ologen™) and minimal use of mitomycin C in cases of late failure blebs.
Methods:
A prospective evaluation of consecutive patients on which same-site DS was performed with subconjunctival and subscleral collagen matrix (Ologen™) and minimal use of mitomycin C; all performed at a single university institution. Intraocular pressure (IOP), number of glaucoma medications, postoperative interventions, postoperative complications and surgical success were registered at 24 hours, 1, 6 and 12 months after the surgery.
Results:
Twenty-five eyes of 25 patients were included in this study. Time from first DS was 55.08 ± 28.16 months. Mean preoperative IOP was 20.88 ± 6.06 mmHg and it was reduced to 16.64 ± 4.02 mmHg, at 12 months after re-operation (p 0,007). At this final visit, requirements for topical medications dropped from a mean of 2.2 ± 1.0 to 0.72 ± 1.0 per patient and no medications were required in 60% of patients. Success was 36 % in criteria A (IOP ≤15mmHg), 72% in criteria B (IOP ≤18 mmHg) and 80 % in criteria C (IOP ≤15 mmHg), 12 months after the second surgery.
Conclusion:
The same-site DS re-operation with subconjunctival and subscleral collagen matrix (Ologen®) and minimal use of mitomycin C is a safe and adequate technique for the reduction of IOP, especially when targeted IOP is not lower than 15mmHg.
We report a case of ocular decompression retinopathy (ODR) with macular edema, diagnosed by optical coherence tomography, after a deep sclerectomy (DS) with an intrascleral implant, resolved with medical therapy 6 months later. The medical literature reports that in 14% of patients suffering from ODR, a pars plana vitrectomy was required, and 15% of patients had a poor final visual acuity. An otherwise healthy 75-year-old man with high myopia and a primary open-angle glaucoma, with previous intraocular pressure (IOP) of 24 mm Hg, underwent a DS with intrascleral implant without complications. The patient suffered postoperatively from ODR with macular edema that required medical therapy with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory eye drops (Nepafenac ® 0.3%) for a period of 6 months. ODR is an infrequent complication that may occur after any surgical or medical procedure that causes a sudden IOP decrease. The presence of macular edema is only reported in 5% of cases and can occur in patients who report a decreased visual acuity, commonly associated with a retinal hemorrhage. We have described a case of ODR with macular edema after DS with intrascleral implant. Although ODR is considered to cause a low level of morbidity, in some patients this may not be the case.
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