Refractive Surgery Complications Flashcards

1
Q

What % of pxs who get laser vision correction will have serious complication?

A

Less than 1% of pxs will develop a serious complication

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Describe Diffuse Lamellar Keratitis (DLK) (LVC Complication)?

A
  • Diffuse sterile inflammation
    o Characterised by inflammatory infiltrates beneath corneal flap interface
    o Characteristic accumulation of these fine, white infiltrates manifest clinically as grainy corneal opacification
  • Occurs within 24-48hrs postoperatively – typically resolves 5-8 days after initiation of appropriate therapy e.g. steroid eye drops
  • LASIK pxs only
  • Non-specific inflammatory response
  • 4 stages according to extent of corneal involvement
    o Stage 1 typically arises 1 to 2 days after LASIK refractive surgery – characterised by peripheral inflammatory infiltrates without central corneal involvement
    o Stage 2 typically arises on post-op days 3 to 4 when inflammatory cells begin migrating from periphery into central cornea, often compromising vision
    o Management of stage 1 & stage 2 is increase steroid drop (usually pred forte) to hourly & review within 24-48hrs
    o Stage 3 categorised as further migration of these cells & development of permanent corneal scarring
     Often referred to as the threshold because of likelihood of eyes in this stage of DLK will develop permanent scarring & resulting loss of vision
    o Stage 4 describes stage in which stroma begins to melt & further corneal scarring will occur – causes significant epithelial disruption that occurs during this stage often results in hyperopic shift
    o Management of stage 3 & 4 require urgent review with treating surgeon ophthalmologist
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Describe 2 LASIK Flap Complications?

A
    1. Striae
      o Folds in the flap – if folds are large enough or lie in visual axis then can affect vision
      o Symptoms: reduced BCVA and affects quality of vision (e.g. glare, haloes)
      o Top pic: micro-striae – faint wrinkles seen on flap
      o Surgeon can correct these folds by lifting, stretching & repositioning flap – if detected at early post-op appt.
    1. Dislodged flap
      o Causes: eye rubbing or squeezing, poorer epithelium, excessive dry eyes or bump to eye
      o Painful
      o Management: visually significant – refer to surgeon for repositioning of flap
      o Bottom pic: flap moved nasally
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Describe epithelial ingrowth (LASIK Complication)?

A
  • Development of epithelial tissue underneath corneal flap
  • Appearance sometimes described as visible nest of cells
  • Symptoms:
    o Often asymptomatic but discomfort/light sensitivity & can sometimes effect vision
    o If progressive, induced astigmatism (cyl)
  • Management: surgeon can correct this by lifting flap and removing ingrown tissue underneath
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Describe Slow Epithelial Healing (LASEK Complications)?

A
  • Discomfort, lacrimation, vision can be affected
  • Comfort usually aided by application of bandage contact lens
  • Antibiotic eyedrops may also be prescribed
  • Corneal haze (mostly associated with LASEK as laser energy is applied directly to surface of cornea)
    o Onset of haze is usually 1-3mths post-op
    o Will resolve naturally as healing completes
    o In more severe cases, ophthalmologist may prescribe eyedrop e.g. steroid to encourage the healing allowing haze to resolve quicker
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Describe Dry Eye as a LVC complication?

A
  • Most common side-effect/risk of LVC
  • Aetiology:
    o Suction effects on goblet cells/mucin layer
    o Alteration in corneal curvature with alteration in:
     Surface wetting
     Corneal denervation with flap creation
  • All LVC pxs experience transient dry eye sxs, normally for around 1-3mths
    o In other cases it can require further on going tx
  • Optom & ophthalmologist should screen for dry eye at pre-op consultation & treat to any surgical procedure using artifical tears/lubricants to reduce risk of dry eye post-op
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Describe Ectasia as a LVC complication?

A
  • Thinning of cornea – post-LASIK is rare
  • Signs & symptoms: can vary between pxs
    o Reduced vision
    o Quality of vision/induced astigmatism – may see more haloes, glare, starbursts around lights
  • Timescale:
    o Months-years post-op
  • Location:
    o Corneal, often inferiorly
  • Appearance:
    o Often normal cornea/advanced: cone shape
    o Pentacam evidence
  • Management:
    o Early intervention is critical/urgent surgeon referral
    o If increase in cyl &/or decrease in BCVA, capture pentacam (see pic – black arrow pointing to ectasia)
    o Cross-linking
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Describe Refractive Lens Exchange Complications?

A
  • Infection occurs in less than ~1 in 1000 people (0.1%)
  • Inflammation: endophthalmitis
    o Rare but severe sight-threatening complication of RLE surgery
    o URGENT surgeon review or HES emergency referral
  • Cystoid Macular Oedema:
    o Fluid accumulates in centre of retina causing blurred vision
    o Usually occurs 2-8wks after surgery (both RLE and cataract surgery)
    o Reduced vision
    o Pre-existing conditions e.g. diabetes, uveitis as well as any intra-operative complication can raise risk of post-surgical cystoid macular oedema
    o First-line tx of postsurgical CMO can include topical eyedrops: pred forte, Acular & Acetazolamide
  • Other complications:
    o Increased IOPs (steroid responder)
    o Retinal detachment
    o IOL displacement (top pic)
    o Posterior Capsular Opacification (YAG laser) (lower pic – beginning of it)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly