Sutureless intrascleral fixation using different three-piece posterior chamber intraocular lenses: a literature review of surgical techniques in cases of insufficient capsular support and a retrospective multicentre study
- PMID: 31788964
- DOI: 10.1111/aos.14307
Sutureless intrascleral fixation using different three-piece posterior chamber intraocular lenses: a literature review of surgical techniques in cases of insufficient capsular support and a retrospective multicentre study
Abstract
We present a literature review of surgical techniques of intraocular lens placement in eyes with insufficient capsular support, focusing on the most recent publications, together with a retrospective multicentre consecutive case series analysis of 103 eyes undergoing pars plana vitrectomy and sutureless intrascleral (SIS) fixation of a standard three-piece PCIOL. Many different approaches appear in the literature without any specific procedure achieving superior outcomes. Advantages and disadvantages vary between techniques. Common complications related to IOL fixation techniques were as follow: anterior chamber IOL: transient/permanent corneal oedema (9-66.6%), uveitis (1.1-39.3%); iris-fixated IOL: pupil ovalization (16-47.7%); and sutured scleral-fixated IOL: suture breakage/exposure (6.1-11%), vitreous haemorrhage: (5.5-16.6%). In our retrospective case series, indications for surgery were postoperative aphakia in 50 eyes (49%), IOL dislocation in 38 eyes (37%) and natural lens dislocation in 15 eyes (14%). Scleral tunnels for haptic fixation were created with (28 eyes, 27.2%) or without (75 eyes, 72.8%) 25 gauge trocar cannulas. Complications included transient hypotony (n = 20; 19.4%), corneal decompensation (n = 7; 6.7%), IOL dislocation (n = 6; 5.8%), cystoid macular oedema (n = 5; 4.8%), vitreous haemorrhage (n = 4; 3.8%) and retinal detachment (n = 4; 3.8%). Mean best corrected visual acuity improved from logMAR 0.65 to 0.36 at the final visit (p = 0.001). In conclusion, SIS fixation provides good anatomical and functional outcomes; however, complications can occur. The number of surgical approaches for IOL dislocation described in the literature indicates that optimal treatment remains to be found.
Keywords: dislocation; intraocular lens; sutureless; vitrectomy.
© 2019 Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica Foundation. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
References
-
- Abbey AM, Hussain RM, Shah AR, Faia LJ, Wolfe JD & Williams GA (2015): Sutureless scleral fixation of intraocular lenses: outcomes of two approaches. The 2014 Yasuo Tano Memorial Lecture. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 253: 1-5.
-
- Agarwal A, Kumar DA, Jacob S, Baid C, Agarwal A & Srinivasan S (2008): Fibrin glue-assisted sutureless posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation in eyes with deficient posterior capsules. J Cataract Refract Surg 34: 1433-1438.
-
- Akimoto M, Taguchi H, Takayama K, Nakagawa S & Hiroi K (2015): Intrascleral fixation technique using catheter needles and 30-gauge ultrathin needles: lock-and-lead technique. J Cataract Refract Surg 41: 257-261.
-
- Armonaite L, Löfgren S & Behndig A (2019): Iris suture fixation of out-of-the-bag dislocated three-piece intraocular lenses. Acta Ophthalmol 97: 583-588.
-
- Burgmüller M, Mihaltz K, Schütze C, Angermann B & Vécsei-Marlovits V (2018): Assessment of long-term intraocular lens (IOL) decentration and tilt in eyes with psudoexfoliation syndrome (PES) following cataract surgery. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 256: 2361-2367.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Miscellaneous