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1.
Arq Bras Oftalmol ; 79(1): 44-5, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26840167

ABSTRACT

This was a report about a pseudophakic patient who experienced isolated total aniridia without damage to other intraocular structures following blunt trauma to the eye. This patient had a history of uneventful cataract surgery using a small clear corneal incision (CCI). This 71-year-old male presented at our clinic with glare in his left eye. He reported that he had fallen down while drunk and struck his left eye against a stone on the road 15 days earlier. He had undergone cataract surgery on his left eye nine months before the accident at another eye clinic. Slit-lamp examination showed total aniridia in his left eye, but there was no hyphema or cells in the anterior chamber. The intraocular lens in his left eye was stable, without decentration, dislocation, or zonular dehiscence and remained in an intact capsular bag. Review of the medical records from the surgical clinic at which he had undergone cataract surgery indicated no specific findings for any intraocular structure including the iris. He had previously undergone an uneventful phacoemulsification for his left eye through a 2.2 mm CCI, followed by the implantation of a single piece acrylic intraocular lens inside an intact capsular bag. This report showed that small-sized CCIs can be opened postoperatively by trauma and that this can result in isolated total aniridia without damage to other intraocular structures.


Subject(s)
Aniridia/etiology , Eye Injuries/complications , Phacoemulsification , Pseudophakia/etiology , Surgical Wound Dehiscence/etiology , Aged , Humans , Iris/injuries , Lenses, Intraocular , Male , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/complications
2.
Arq Bras Oftalmol ; 79(1): 53-5, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26840171

ABSTRACT

Post-traumatic aniridia combined with aphakia may be seen after globe injury. Aside from esthetic aspects, partial or total loss of the iris tissue may also be related to various degrees of glare and photophobia. Such patients suffer from severe visual impairment secondary to aphakia. Herein we describe a novel surgical technique for the management of an aphakic eye with traumatic aniridia for a patient who underwent transscleral fixation of a custom-tailored artificial iris prosthesis combined with a rigid intraocular lens (IOL). Tight suturing of the IOL haptic eyelets on the silicone iris prosthesis and fixation of such a complex to the scleral wall may provide excellent cosmetic and functional outcomes in aphakic eyes with aniridia.


Subject(s)
Aniridia/surgery , Aphakia/surgery , Iris/surgery , Lenses, Intraocular , Prostheses and Implants , Sclera/surgery , Aniridia/etiology , Aphakia/etiology , Eye Injuries/surgery , Female , Humans , Lens Implantation, Intraocular/methods , Middle Aged , Prosthesis Design , Treatment Outcome , Visual Acuity
3.
Arq. bras. oftalmol ; Arq. bras. oftalmol;79(1): 44-45, Jan.-Feb. 2016. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-771901

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT This was a report about a pseudophakic patient who experienced isolated total aniridia without damage to other intraocular structures following blunt trauma to the eye. This patient had a history of uneventful cataract surgery using a small clear corneal incision (CCI). This 71-year-old male presented at our clinic with glare in his left eye. He reported that he had fallen down while drunk and struck his left eye against a stone on the road 15 days earlier. He had undergone cataract surgery on his left eye nine months before the accident at another eye clinic. Slit-lamp examination showed total aniridia in his left eye, but there was no hyphema or cells in the anterior chamber. The intraocular lens in his left eye was stable, without decentration, dislocation, or zonular dehiscence and remained in an intact capsular bag. Review of the medical records from the surgical clinic at which he had undergone cataract surgery indicated no specific findings for any intraocular structure including the iris. He had previously undergone an uneventful phacoemulsification for his left eye through a 2.2 mm CCI, followed by the implantation of a single piece acrylic intraocular lens inside an intact capsular bag. This report showed that small-sized CCIs can be opened postoperatively by trauma and that this can result in isolated total aniridia without damage to other intraocular structures.


RESUMO Relatamos um paciente com história de cirurgia de catarata sem intercorrências usando uma pequena incisão na córnea clara (CCI), que apresentou aniridia total isolada, sem danos a outras estruturas intraoculares, após trauma contuso no olho. Um homem de 71 anos de idade apresentou-se em nossa clínica referindo brilho no olho esquerdo. Ele relatou que, 15 dias antes, havia caído enquanto estava bêbado e atingiu seu olho esquerdo contra uma pedra na estrada. Ele havia passado por uma cirurgia de catarata no olho esquerdo, nove meses antes do acidente em outro serviço. Exame de lâmpada de fenda mostrou aniridia total de olho esquerdo, sem hifema ou células na câmara anterior. A lente intraocular no olho esquerdo ficou estável, com o saco capsular restante intacto, sem descentralização, luxação ou deiscência zonular. O exame dos registros médicos do serviço em que ele havia se submetido a uma cirurgia de catarata não mostraram relatos específicos a qualquer estrutura intraocular, incluindo a íris. O olho esquerdo fora submetido à facoemulsificação sem complicações, através de um CCI de 2,2 mm, seguido pela implantação de uma lente intraocular acrílica peça única dentro do saco capsular intacto. Este relatório mostra que, mesmo pequenas CCIs podem ser abertas no pós-operatório por trauma e que isso pode resultar em aniridia total isolada, sem danos a outras estruturas intraoculares.


Subject(s)
Aged , Humans , Male , Aniridia/etiology , Eye Injuries/complications , Phacoemulsification , Pseudophakia/etiology , Surgical Wound Dehiscence/etiology , Iris/injuries , Lenses, Intraocular , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/complications
4.
Arq. bras. oftalmol ; Arq. bras. oftalmol;79(1): 53-55, Jan.-Feb. 2016. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-771905

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT Post-traumatic aniridia combined with aphakia may be seen after globe injury. Aside from esthetic aspects, partial or total loss of the iris tissue may also be related to various degrees of glare and photophobia. Such patients suffer from severe visual impairment secondary to aphakia. Herein we describe a novel surgical technique for the management of an aphakic eye with traumatic aniridia for a patient who underwent transscleral fixation of a custom-tailored artificial iris prosthesis combined with a rigid intraocular lens (IOL). Tight suturing of the IOL haptic eyelets on the silicone iris prosthesis and fixation of such a complex to the scleral wall may provide excellent cosmetic and functional outcomes in aphakic eyes with aniridia.


RESUMO Aniridia pós-traumática combinada com afacia pode ser observada após lesões do globo ocular. Além do ponto de vista estético, a perda parcial ou total do tecido da íris também pode estar relacionada com vários graus de ofuscamento e fotofobia. Estes pacientes sofrem de deficiência visual grave secundária a afacia. Relata-se uma técnica cirúrgica inovadora para tratamento de um olho com afacia associada à aniridia traumática que foi submetido à fixação transescleral de uma prótese de íris artificial feita sob medida combinada com uma lente intraocular rígida (IOL). A sutura das alças da IOL sobre a prótese iriana de silicone, e a fixação desse complexo na parede escleral podem proporcionar excelente resultado estético e funcional em olhos afácicos com aniridia.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Aniridia/surgery , Aphakia/surgery , Iris/surgery , Lenses, Intraocular , Prostheses and Implants , Sclera/surgery , Aniridia/etiology , Aphakia/etiology , Eye Injuries/surgery , Lens Implantation, Intraocular/methods , Prosthesis Design , Treatment Outcome , Visual Acuity
5.
Arq Bras Oftalmol ; 68(3): 389-92, 2005.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16059575

ABSTRACT

The objective of this report is to demonstrate the effectiveness of an iris prosthesis to treat a refractory glaucoma induced by silicone oil in the anterior chamber. This case is about a patient who suffered a trauma caused by firearm shrapnel. A vitreous-retinal surgery was performed to remove intraocular foreign matter and to realign the retina that was detached. Due to the partial traumatic aniridia, silicone oil that was introduced in the vitreous chamber to keep the retina in place migrated to the anterior chamber, resulting in the decrease of endothelium cells and uncontrollable intraocular pressure. We performed transscleral fixation of the iris prosthesis to correct these problems. After a 45-month period of evolution, sight became stable at the 1 meter finger-count distance and intra-ocular pressure at 14 mmHg We may conclude that the triad that consists of lack of: iris diaphragm, aphakia and silicone oil that could not be removed because of inexorable occurrence of detachment of the retina should lead the surgeon to consider transscleral fixation of the iris prosthesis. This procedure might control intraocular pressure and/or preserve corneal transparency, preventing silicone oil from contact with the trabecular net and the corneal endothelium.


Subject(s)
Aniridia/etiology , Eye Foreign Bodies/complications , Iris/surgery , Prostheses and Implants , Adult , Aniridia/surgery , Anterior Chamber , Glaucoma/chemically induced , Humans , Male , Silicone Oils/adverse effects , Treatment Outcome , Wounds, Gunshot/complications
6.
Arq. bras. oftalmol ; Arq. bras. oftalmol;68(3): 389-392, maio-jun. 2005. ilus
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-410455

ABSTRACT

O objetivo deste trabalho é demonstrar a eficácia da prótese iriana na resolução do glaucoma refratário, provocado pela presença de óleo de silicone na câmara anterior. Trata-se de paciente que sofreu trauma por estilhaços de projétil de arma de fogo. A cirurgia vítreo-retiniana visou a remoção dos corpos estranhos intra-oculares e posicionamento da retina, que se encontrava descolada. Devido à ausência parcial do tecido iriano e a afacia, o óleo de silicone introduzido na câmara vítrea, para manter a retina colada, migrou para a câmara anterior e provocou gradativa diminuição do número de células endoteliais e aumento da pressão intra-ocular incontrolável clinicamente. Optamos pela fixação transescleral da prótese de íris para corrigir tais complicações. Após 45 meses de evolução, a acuidade visual estabilizou-se em conta dedos a 1 metro e a pressão intra-ocular em 14 mmHg. Concluímos que a tríade composta pela ausência do diafragma iriano, afacia e impossibilidade da remoção do óleo de silicone, devido a inexorável recorrência de descolamento de retina, deve levar o cirurgião a ponderar sobre a fixação transescleral da prótese de íris. Esta conduta poderá controlar a pressão intra-ocular e/ou preservar a transparência corneana, impedindo o contato do óleo de silicone com a malha trabecular e com o endotélio corneano.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Adult , Aniridia/etiology , Eye Foreign Bodies/complications , Iris/surgery , Prostheses and Implants , Anterior Chamber , Aniridia/surgery , Wounds, Gunshot/complications , Glaucoma/chemically induced , Silicone Oils/adverse effects , Treatment Outcome
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