A 68-year-old female underwent Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) in her right eye using a 3D visualization system with the surgeon looking directly to a digital screen instead of through the eyepieces of the surgical microscope. The procedure was uneventful. Five weeks after the surgery the DMEK graft was in good position and totally adhered, the cornea clear and uncorrected distance visual acuity 20/50. This is the first reported case of DMEK using 3D augmented reality visualization system. It seems to offer advantages for the corneal surgeon in critical steps of the endothelial grafting procedure.
We describe the case of a 52-year-old female with past history of LASIK, 21 years earlier, without Fuchs’ endothelial dystrophy, who underwent phacoemulsification and intraocular lens (IOL) implantation. During the early postoperative period severe corneal edema, anterior chamber cellularity and iris inflammation presented, accompanied by a clear space along the LASIK interface. Those findings were interpreted as part of a Toxic Anterior Segment Syndrome (TASS) and secondary interface fluid syndrome (IFS). When interface fluid was present, intraocular pressure (IOP) measured in the center of the cornea yielded very low values. In addition, applanation tonometry performed in the corneal periphery, as well as Schiotz tonometry and digital tonometry also indicated that the IOP was not high. Fluid in the interface persisted until a DMEK was carried out 11 months after the phacoemulsification surgery. Five days postoperatively the IFS resolved, confirmed by OCT imaging. The origin of IFS in this case was corneal edema secondary to endothelial cell dysfunction and it was not related to high IOP. This is the first reported case of IFS following TASS, the third case published of DMEK procedure used to solve endothelial failure-related IFS, and the case with the longest time of presentation after LASIK.
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