July 24, 2015
1 min read
Save

Publication Exclusive: Innovative technique variations offer options in difficult cases

You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

Amar Agarwal, MS, FRCS, FRCOphth, is an amazingly innovative surgeon and a prolific writer and educator. He has popularized the so-called “glued posterior chamber IOL technique.” In this technique, the haptics a of a posterior chamber IOL are placed in scleral tunnels under a scleral flap. The flap is glued in place with temporary fibrin glue under conjunctiva as well. It is really an intrascleral fixation of the posterior chamber IOL, and the glue is not critical. One could close the scleral flaps with sutures as an alternative because fibrin glue is expensive and not universally available. High-quality microforceps, such as those manufactured by MicroSurgical Technology, are a requirement.

My fellows and I played a role in studying and popularizing scleral suture fixated posterior chamber IOLs in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The epidemic of pseudophakic bullous keratopathy caused by closed loop anterior chamber lenses required a solution for IOL exchange. Exchange for another anterior chamber IOL, especially in the face of significant peripheral anterior synechia and often secondary glaucoma, was less than ideal. A posterior chamber IOL could be sutured to the iris, but many irides were abnormal with large iridectomies and pupil distortion.

Special IOLs, including the Alcon CZ70BD and Storz P366UV, were designed with haptic eyelets by my fellows and I to simplify transscleral suturing. We started by placing the transscleral sutures under scleral flaps using 9-0 and 10-0 polypropylene sutures, but some lenses subluxated secondary to suture breakage at 15 or more years after placement. This led to the use of Gore-Tex sutures, which to date appear to be permanent. Richard Hoffman developed an elegant technique eliminating the conjunctival flaps using a cornea-based scleral flap. I have also abandoned polypropylene sutures after experiencing many cases of late suture breakage or degradation. I have found that a polyester suture, Mersilene available from Ethicon, works well, and to date, I have experienced no cases of suture failure using this material.

Click here to read the full publication exclusive, Lindstrom's Perspective, published in Ocular Surgery News U.S. Edition, July 25, 2015.