Title: Posterior Capsular Rupture
1Posterior Capsular Rupture Vitrectomy
Farid Karimian M.D 2002
2Capsular Anatomy
- Elastic basement membrane, type IV collagen
- Thickness 2-4 ? at the posterior pole
- Thickest 17-23 ? near the ant. post equator
- Ant. Capsule ? 14 ? thickness increases with
age - Fragile posterior capsule
- - Congenital post lenticonus, posterior
polar - cataract
- - Posterior subcapsular ( PSC) age-
related, - steroid
3Signs of Capsule Rupture
- Sudden, abrupt and dramatic posterior
- displacement of iris
- Momentary pupillary dilatation
- Nucleus fall away from the phaco tip
- Nucleus dose not follow toward the phaco tip
- NOTE Any time suspected of ruptured posterior
capsule modify surgical plan on that
suspicion
4Predisposing Factors for Capsular Rupture
- 1- Position of surgeons hand obscuring
-
visibility - 2- Irrigation fluid pooling
- 3- Torsion of the globe
- 4- Poor microscope illumination or alignment
- 5- Poor visibility secondary to pathology dense
arcus, ptryguim, band keratopathy, corneal scars,
interstitial keratitis
5Predisposing Factorscont.(1)
- Long and short axial length eyes deep or
shallow AC - Pseudoexfoliation, weak zonules, poor dilation
- Brunescent or black cataract
- Dense asteroid hyalosis
6Predisposing Factors cont.(2)
- Posterior polar cataracts (esp. calcified)
- - cataract to post capsule adhesion,
- - posterior capsule thining
- Inexperienced surgeons
- Poor visualization (eg. Microscope problems)
7Predisposing Factors cont.(3)
- Demented, disoriented, anxious, and addict
patients inadvertant movement - Equipment malfunction
- Pre-existing trauma unseen capsular or
zonular damage - Small pupils
8When the Posterior Capsule is Torn?
- Terminal stages of phaco for emulsification of
last pieces of endonucleus - During posterior capsule polishing
- During I/A
- Hydrodissection, IOL insertion less common
9Developing a Surgical Plan
- Posterior capsule tear suspicion ? Alternate
surgical plan - ?
- Goal to minimize prolonged or damaging
- Procedures damaging retina and/or cornea
- Planning ?
- ? Timing (when in the procedure)
- ? Location (where in posterior capsule)
- ? Size (small, medium, large, or extra
large)
10Posterior Capsular Rupture During Nucleus
Emulsification
- Two main questions
- 1. Is vitreous present in A/C?
- 2. Is Conversion to ECCE indicated?
- Conversion decision
- 1. Hardness and size of nucleus
- 2. Size of pupil
- 3. Maintain adequate deep A/C
- 4. Ease of access to anterior segment
- 5. Level of surgical experience
11Conversion to ECCE
- Support the lens nucleus with a dispersive
viscoelastic (injection underneath) - Extend peritomy and corneoscleral incision
- Open the wound larger than expected
- Use lens loop or manipulator
- No limbal pressure ? vitreous will be
-
expelled
12Continued Phacoemulsification
- Inject viscoelastic below fragment
- Protect the endothelium
- Lower bottle height, vacuum and flow
- Emulsify the nucleus in A/C in one piece
- Use second instrument to feed phaco tip
- Do not create multiple fragments
13The Pseudo-posterior Capsule Sheets glide after
viscoelastic injection under nucleus
- Support nucleus fragments
- Prevent excess loss of vitreous
- Both ECCE and phaco can be done
- over Sheets glide
- Finally I/A and vitrectomy over glide
14Principles of managing an open posterior capsule
- 1- Do not mix cataract with vitreous
- - Mixture of lens material will cause
inflammation - - Isolated cortex in the eye is absorbed
with low - reaction
- - Cortex- vitreous mixture ? variable course
? - from tolerance to severe inflammation
15Principles of managing an open posterior
capsule(cont)
- - Nucleus left in the eye ? variable clinical
-
outcome - - Small nucleus fragment in A/C ? inferior angle
- ? endothelium rubbing ? cell loss
- ?
- Should be removed
161- Do not mix cont.
- Nucleus fragments behind iris and above anterior
capsule ? fairly harmless - Nucleus fragments in vitreous ? significant
inflammation - Increased inflammation
- - personal Physiology and response,
- - Central nucleus gt peripheral chips
- About 1/3 of cases with dropped nucleus chips
develop uveitis and glaucoma
172- Do not stretch the slinky
- Vitreous has natural elasticity ? extending down
to - macula (not necessarily)
- -Tensions on anterior vitreous ? exertion through
- entire vitreous body ? pulling on the macula and
- vitreous base
- During phacoemulsification ? small incisions
plugged - by instruments ?
- If pressure A/C is kept sufficient ?Prevent
vitreous prolapse - ?
- Forces remained in anterior vitreous
- ?
- No transmission to macula or vitreous base
18Posterior Assisted Levitation
- When stabilization of nucleus is impossible
- Distal zonular dehiscence ? Distal pole of
nucleus falling into the vitreous - Pars plana stab incision 3.5mm posterior to
limbus - Site of incision ? wherever zonular hinge occurs
- Cyclodialysis spatula ? lever the nucleus into
the A/C - Removal by phaco or extracapsular approach
(preferred)
19Specific Clinical Situations
- Posterior capsule rupture and vitreous loss
situations - 1- During Capsulotomy and Hydrodissection
- -poorly directed anterior capsule ? peripheral
extension - ?
- Tear usually stops by zonule network
- High volume with rapid injection ? extends radial
tear into equator and back to posterior capsule
20Specific Clinical Situations cont
- Small capsulorrhexis ? phaco needle
-
trauma - Sharp hydrodissection needle ? radial tear
formation - Presence of posterior polar cataract or post
capsule defect - High MW viscoelastic injection under capsular
- ? wound extension ? nucleus delivery
212- During Sculpting
- Hard nucleus ? insufficient power-
- - blunt needle tip
- - low machine power settings
- - low power generation
- Nudging nucleus toward 6 oclock ? pushing
- inferior capsule
- ?Pulling on superior zonules
- Superior zonular dehiscence ? whole
- nucleus moved down
- ?Failure of nucleus to return
- Conversion into ECCE after anterior capsule
relaxing - incisions
222- During Sculptingcont.
- Peripheral sculpting ? capsular trauma
- High vacuum sculpting ? sudden
- emulsification of posterior nuclear
- plate and cortex ? capsular rupture
- Inferior capsulorrhexis rim trauma ?
- posterior extension
- Improper focusing on sculpting depth
233- During Rotation of the Nucleus
- Causes - inadequate hydrodissection (nucleus
adhered to capsule) ? shearing off zonules - - Second instrument- capsule
trauma - - Unstable zonules e.g.
pseudexfoliation - ? bimanual
rotation - If shearing of zonules is complete ? ICCE
-
removal must be done - Zonular dehiscence
- - lt90 ? complete hydrodissection ? PE
- - 90- 270 ? capsular tension ring ? PE
- - gt270 ? ECCE with radial tears in
anterior - capsule or ICCE
244- During Emulsification
- Causes
- - Small capsulorrhexis and during
division - - Sudden flattened A/C and capsular
bag - - Uncontrolled surge during
emulsification - nucleus particle
- - Sharp ends of nuclear fragments
- Management
- - Protection of remaining PC with
viscoelastic - - Sheets glide support of nucleus
fragment- - pushing back PC and vitreous
- - Emulsification of nucleus fragments
over glide - in A/C
-
255- During Cortical Aspiration
- Causes
- Post capsule trauma by IA tip
Flat AC, excess -
aspiration - Anterior capsule entrapment in
aspiration port ? -
traction - Inadequate hydrodissection
- Management
- - Place dispersive viscoelastic over the
vent - - Embed IA tip into the cortex ? apply
vacuum - (not
aspirating vitreous) - - Stripping toward capsule tear
- - Lower infusion bottle ?? inflow, ?
turbulence - - Vitrectomy tip can be used for
cortical removal - - Leave cortical material if not too
much!
266- During or After IOL Implantation
? More complicated than earlier phases ? First
secure IOL to prevent sinking ? Use viscoelastic
to hold vitreous back ? By clockwise rotation
bring IOL into sulcus or
AC ? If capsulorrhexis is intact ? sulcus
fixation
27During or After IOL Implantation cont.(1)
- Close the wound ? to prevent flat AC, further
endothelial damage - Bimanual vitrectomy over and under the IOL
- Constrict pupil by intraocular miotic injection
over IOL ? check vitreous clearance - If no sufficient capsular support ? transscleral
fixation, or ACIOL
28Vitrectomy Following Vitreous Loss Principles
- Keep AC as closed as possible instruments,
suture - Maintain IOP stable keep foot pedal at stage I,
use viscoelastics - Loss of anterior segment ? forward displacement
of vitreous - Vitrectomy setting suction 60mmHg, cut 360-400
cpm - Do vitrectomy adequately
- Keep capsule rent as small as possible
29Vitrectomy with Coaxial Infusion
- - Special tip to-reduce no. of entrances
- - Easily placed through phaco incision
- - It fails, because stretches the slinky
- 1. The coaxial infusion strikes posterior capsule
? - ? rupture size
- ?
- More vitreous comes forward
- 2. Coaxial cannula reaching the body of vitreous
? hydration of vitreous - ?
- Increase vitreous volume
- ?
- ? Forward movement
- 3. Flow moves the vitreous around ? wiggling and
shaking vitreous ? flush it forward - Recommendation Dont use coaxial infusion
cannula
30Two-handed (port) Vitrectomy
- Close the entrance wounds for vitrectomy tip ?
i.e. make a closed system - Procedure will be performed rapidly and
conveniently - Perform small vitrectomy without irrigation
- Prevent eye softening by repeated injection of
viscoelastic ? push vitreous back - Chamber-maintainer through side-port forms AC
- Remove the vitreous to below the level of
posterior capsule
31Postoperative Care
- At conclusion of surgery
- - Betamethasone 4mg (short-acting)
- - Antibiotic e.g. Gentamicin 20mg
- - Trimcinolone (kenalog) 20mg or Methyl-
- prednisolone 40mg (longer anti-inflammatory
- action)
- - Take care of IOP rise, endophthalmitis, and
- other complications of vitreous loss
- - Systemic steroid, prednisolone 1-1.5 mg/kg
- PO for 7-14 days