Title: Pediatric Keratoplasty
1Pediatric Keratoplasty
- Presented by
- Dr. Mohammad Abdullah Bawtag
- VitreoRetinal Consultant
Sanaa University 2022
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3History of Pediatric Keratoplasty
4- 1824 Reisinger First animal graft and coined
the term keratoplasty - 1831 Dieffenbach proposes partial-thickness
keratoplasty (LKP, extraocular procedure) - 1846 First use of general anesthesia ether, at
the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA - 1878 Arthur von Hippel, invented circular cutting
trephine, blades of different diameters, a key
for winding up the watch mechanism - 1888 Arthur von Hippel, first successful LKP in
man - 1908 Plange First human lamellar autograft
(clear cornea from blind eye to opposite, scarred
eye of the same patient). Graft remained clear
for 5 years. - 1912 Magitot Use of human cornea previously
preserved in an antiseptic fluid for corneal
transplantation.
5- In 1905 The first cornea transplant was performed
by Eduard Zirm .
- in 1955 Tudor Thomas ,conceived the idea of a
donor system for corneal grafts and an eye bank
was established in East Grinstead .
- Real progress in past 40 years- KPro design,
material, prevention and management of
complications
- Widespread use limited by early and late
complications
- The Dohlman or Boston Keratoprosthesis is the
most popular now
6Terminologies of Pediatric keratoplasty
7keratoplasty
Corneal Transplantation
Corneal Grafting
Keratoprosthesis
8Definitions of Pediatric keratoplasty
9 The cornea is the transparent front part of
the eye that covers the iris, pupil and anterior
chamber.
10Keratoplasty simply means surgery to the cornea.
11- Keratoplasty is a surgical procedure where a
damaged or diseased cornea is replaced by donated
corneal tissue (the graft). - When the entire cornea is replaced it is known as
Penetrating Keratoplasty and when only part of
the cornea is replaced it is known as lamellar
keratoplasty.
12Keratoprosthesis is a surgical procedure where
a severely damaged or diseased cornea is replaced
with an artificial cornea to restore useful
vision or to make the eye comfortable in painful
keratopathy
13-
- The graft is taken from a recently deceased
individual with no known diseases or other
factors that may affect the chance of survival of
the donated tissue or the health of the
recipient. - Donors can be of any age, as is shown in the case
of Janis Babson, who donated her eyes after dying
at the age of 10. - Corneal transplantation is performed when
medicines, keratoconus conservative surgery and
cross-linking can no longer heal the cornea. - This surgical procedure usually treats corneal
blindness,with success rates of at least 41 as
of 2021.
14Indications of Pediatric keratoplasty
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16- 1- With Associated Glaucoma
- Congenital glaucoma
- Peterss anomaly
- Other anterior segment dysgenesis
- 2. Without glaucoma
- Sclerocornea
- Dermoid
- Birth trauma
- Metabolic disease
- Keloid
- Aniridia
- Acquired non-Traumatic
- Keratoconus
- Infective keratitis with or without perforation
- Post infective corneal/ Corneo-iridic Scars
- Keratomalacia
Anterior segment photographs of eyes where
congenital corneal opacity spontaneously
regressed. a, b The right eye of a female patient
with Peters anomaly at 25 days (a) and 15 months
of age (b). c, d The left eye of a male patient
with Peters anomaly at 22 days (c) and 6 months
of age (d). e, f The left eye of a male patient
with Peters anomaly
17Types of Pediatric keratoplasty
18- Types
- Based on Location
- Central
- PeripheralCircular, oval, crescentic, annular,
semilunar, rectangular or strip graft - Totalcentral and peripheral
- Corneoscleral
- Based on Stem-cell Transplantation
- Non-stem cell KP
- KP with stem cell transplantation (SCT)
19- Types of keratoplasty
- Based on the thickness of the cornea
transplanted, keratoplasty can be divided as - Penetrating keratoplasty- involved full thickness
of the cornea. - Lamellar keratoplasty- involves a transplantation
of a part. - Anterior lamellar SALK, MALK, DALK, TALK
- Posterior lamellar DLEK, DMEK, DSAEK
20Contraindications of Pediatric keratoplasty
21- Dry Eye
- Blepharitis
- Ectropion
- Entropion
- Recurrent ocular infection
- Melting cornea
- Herpetic infection
- Uveitis
- Uncontrolled Glaucoma
22Challenges of Pediatric keratoplasty
23- Sever Ocular pathology
- Technically difficult
- Smaller eye
- Elastic sclera
- Shallow AC
- Anterior displacement iris/ Lens
- Young age
- Poor cooperation
- Hard to examine
- Sudden rapid rejection
The patients are different The Eyes are
different The disease are different The surgery
and anesthesia are different
24Complications of Pediatric Penetrating
keratoplasty
25- Allograft rejection
- Corneal scarring and neovascularization
- Iridocorneal adhesions
- Glaucoma
- Cataract
- Wound dehiscence
- Amblyopia
- Corneal steepening and high astigmatism
- Graft infection and ulcer
- Endophthalmitis
- Persistent epithelial defect
- RD
- Phthisis
26Alternatives to Pediatric keratoplasty
27- Contact lenses
- Phototherapeutic keratectomy
- Intrastromal corneal ring segments
- Corneal collagen cross-linking
28Pre operative Evaluation
- ? Electroretinography (ERG) and Visually Evoked
Response (VER) helpful in predicting the visual
potential. - ? Pre operative Ultrasound examination to rule
out presence of Retinal Detachment and other
posterior segment abnormalities. - ? IOP should be maximally controlled before
surgery
29Surgical Procedure Keratoplasty
30Animations Videos for Keratoplasty
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34Postoperative Care of Pediatric keratoplasty
35- First 2 months
- 2-3x / week
- Frequent Postopretive EUAs
- Early suture removal
- Long term slow taper of topical steroid over
one year - Sedation p.r.n
- No vaccination for one year
- Co-management with pediatric ophthalmologist
necessary - Optical correctio ASAP after suture removal
36Prognosis
- Best
- Multiple Graft failure in a relatively
non-inflamed eye with intact tear and blink
mechanisms (following dystrophies, infections,
etc) - Aniridia and other limbal stem cell failure
cases Intermediate - Chemical burns, HSV
- Worst
- Autoimmune diseases
- Mucous membrane pemphigoid
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome
- Chronic uveitis
37Thanks