[Pseudophakic retinal detachment]. 2011

W Herrmann, and H Helbig, and H Heimann
Klinik und Poliklinik für Augenheilkunde, Universität Regensburg. wolfgangherrmann@gmx.net

Modern phacoemulsification has established itself as a safe and very rewarding surgical procedure. Patients and surgeons may not associate late complications with the initial surgery. However, recent studies have demonstrated that such a causal relationship may persist for many years after the cataract procedure and that there is a significant increase in the risk for developing a retinal detachment during the postoperative years. The mean time period between cataract surgery and pseudophakic retinal detachment is between 3 and 4 years. Even uncomplicated cataract surgery alters the physiological processes within the eye and can lead to progressive destruction of the vitreous for many years after the surgery. Therefore, the risk for a retinal detachment is increased for at least 10 years after the initial procedure. In recent epidemiological studies, the most important risk factors for pseudophakic retinal detachment were myopia, younger age and male gender. If all factors are combined, the cumulative risk for developing a retinal detachment after cataract surgery may rise to 20 %. Additional factors that may increase this risk are additional intraoperative complications, for example, rupture of the posterior capsule, vitreous loss or dropped nucleus. Compared to phakic retinal detachments, pseudophakic patients on average present with a shorter history of visual symptoms, are older, more commonly male and display fewer, smaller and more anteriorly located retinal breaks that frequently are only detected during surgery. The anatomic success rates have improved significantly over the past years, in particular through the advances and increasing popularity of primary vitrectomy. However, functional results are still disappointing. Only about half of the patients will achieve reading ability without low vision aids. The increased and long-term risk for pseudophakic retinal detachment should be part of the preoperative consent process of any cataract surgery, in particular, in young myopic males.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D012163 Retinal Detachment Separation of the inner layers of the retina (neural retina) from the pigment epithelium. Retinal detachment occurs more commonly in men than in women, in eyes with degenerative myopia, in aging and in aphakia. It may occur after an uncomplicated cataract extraction, but it is seen more often if vitreous humor has been lost during surgery. (Dorland, 27th ed; Newell, Ophthalmology: Principles and Concepts, 7th ed, p310-12). Retinal Pigment Epithelial Detachment,Detachment, Retinal,Detachments, Retinal,Retinal Detachments
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D012307 Risk Factors An aspect of personal behavior or lifestyle, environmental exposure, inborn or inherited characteristic, which, based on epidemiological evidence, is known to be associated with a health-related condition considered important to prevent. Health Correlates,Risk Factor Scores,Risk Scores,Social Risk Factors,Population at Risk,Populations at Risk,Correlates, Health,Factor, Risk,Factor, Social Risk,Factors, Social Risk,Risk Factor,Risk Factor Score,Risk Factor, Social,Risk Factors, Social,Risk Score,Score, Risk,Score, Risk Factor,Social Risk Factor
D012591 Scleral Buckling An operation for retinal detachment which reduces the size of the globe by indenting the sclera so that it approximates the retina. Buckling, Scleral,Bucklings, Scleral,Scleral Bucklings
D015984 Causality The relating of causes to the effects they produce. Causes are termed necessary when they must always precede an effect and sufficient when they initiate or produce an effect. Any of several factors may be associated with the potential disease causation or outcome, including predisposing factors, enabling factors, precipitating factors, reinforcing factors, and risk factors. Causation,Enabling Factors,Multifactorial Causality,Multiple Causation,Predisposing Factors,Reinforcing Factors,Causalities,Causalities, Multifactorial,Causality, Multifactorial,Causation, Multiple,Causations,Causations, Multiple,Enabling Factor,Factor, Enabling,Factor, Predisposing,Factor, Reinforcing,Factors, Enabling,Factors, Predisposing,Factors, Reinforcing,Multifactorial Causalities,Multiple Causations,Predisposing Factor,Reinforcing Factor
D017678 Sex Distribution The number of males and females in a given population. The distribution may refer to how many men or women or what proportion of either in the group. The population is usually patients with a specific disease but the concept is not restricted to humans and is not restricted to medicine. Distribution, Sex,Distributions, Sex,Sex Distributions
D018918 Phacoemulsification A procedure for removal of the crystalline lens in cataract surgery in which an anterior capsulectomy is performed by means of a needle inserted through a small incision at the temporal limbus, allowing the lens contents to fall through the dilated pupil into the anterior chamber where they are broken up by the use of ultrasound and aspirated out of the eye through the incision. (Cline, et al., Dictionary of Visual Science, 4th ed & In Focus 1993;1(1):1) Phacoemulsifications

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