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Incidence of hypotony and sympathetic ophthalmia following trans‐scleral cyclophotocoagulation for glaucoma and a report of risk factors
Author(s) -
Aujla Jaskirat S,
Lee Graham A,
Vincent Stephen J,
Thomas Ravi
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
clinical and experimental ophthalmology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.3
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1442-9071
pISSN - 1442-6404
DOI - 10.1111/ceo.12088
Subject(s) - medicine , sympathetic ophthalmia , glaucoma , intraocular pressure , ophthalmology , incidence (geometry) , enucleation , phthisis bulbi , surgery , uveitis , physics , optics
Objective To report the incidence and risk factors for hypotony and estimate the risk of sympathetic ophthalmia following diode laser trans‐scleral cyclophotocoagulation ( TSCPC ). Design Retrospective study using data from a private tertiary glaucoma clinic and review of the literature. Participants Seventy eyes of 70 patients with refractory glaucoma who received TSCPC treatment. Methods Review of the records of consecutive patients who underwent TSCPC by a single ophthalmic surgeon and review of the literature. Main Outcome Measures Hypotony (including phthisis bulbi), sympathetic ophthalmia.Results Seven eyes (10%; CI 5–19%) developed hypotony and included 4 eyes that developed phthisis. Higher total energy delivered during TSCPC treatment was associated with an increased risk of hypotony: eyes that developed hypotony received a mean total energy of 192.5 ± 73.2 joules, compared to a mean of 152.9 ± 83.2 joules in hypotony‐free cases. The risk of sympathetic ophthalmia estimated from a review of the published literature and current series was one in 1512, or 0.07% ( CI 0.03%–0.17%). Conclusions Total laser energy is one of several risk factors that act in a sufficient component cause‐model to produce hypotony in an individual patient. The small sample size precluded inference for other individual putative risk factors but titrating laser energy may help decrease the occurrence of hypotony. The risk of sympathetic ophthalmia calculated from the literature is likely an overestimate caused by publication bias.