• Users Online: 1315
  • Home
  • Print this page
  • Email this page

   Table of Contents      
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Year : 2012  |  Volume : 60  |  Issue : 1  |  Page : 71-72

Descemet's membrane detachment managed with perfluro-n-octane liquid


Retina Unit, Jothi Eye Care Centre, Pondicherry, India

Date of Submission22-Oct-2010
Date of Acceptance05-Aug-2011
Date of Web Publication30-Dec-2011

Correspondence Address:
M Ashok Kumar
Jothi Eye Care Centre, Calve Subbaraya Chetty Street, Pondicherry - 605001
India
Login to access the Email id

Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None


DOI: 10.4103/0301-4738.91346

Rights and Permissions
  Abstract 

We report the case of a 68-year-old male who developed Descemet's membrane detachment after temporal clear corneal phacoemulsification which did not settle with air or viscoelastic injection. The Descemet's membrane was successfully reattached with restoration of 20/50 vision with the help of perfluro-n-octane liquid. To our knowledge, this is the first such case to be reported.

Keywords: Descemet′s detachment, perfluro-n-octane, Perflurocarbon liquid


How to cite this article:
Kumar M A, Vaithianathan V. Descemet's membrane detachment managed with perfluro-n-octane liquid. Indian J Ophthalmol 2012;60:71-2

How to cite this URL:
Kumar M A, Vaithianathan V. Descemet's membrane detachment managed with perfluro-n-octane liquid. Indian J Ophthalmol [serial online] 2012 [cited 2023 Nov 30];60:71-2. Available from: https://journals.lww.com/ijo/pages/default.aspx/text.asp?2012/60/1/71/91346

Descemet's detachment during cataract surgery can be a potentially blinding complication if not recognized in time and managed. Management usually is intracameral injection of air, gas like C3F8 or viscoelastics. We are reporting a case of inferior half Descemet's detachment successfully managed with perfluro-n-octane liquid after failure to attach with air and viscoelastic.


  Case Report Top


A 68-year-old male presented with grade 4 nuclear cataract with visual acuity of 20/200 in the left eye. He had best corrected visual acuity of 20/200 in the right eye and examination of that eye revealed normal pseudophakia with age-related macular degeneration. He underwent temporal clear corneal phacoemulsification in the left eye. Side ports with 1.2-mm lance tip blade were made superotemporally and inferotemporally. Stretch pupilloplasty was done for rigid pupil and intraoperative iris trauma was also recorded. At the end of surgery, hydration of the main incision and side ports was done. On first postoperative follow-up, inferior half corneal edema with Descemet's detachment from inferotemporal side port extending to lower one-third of cornea was noted. Visual acuity was 20/400. Air was injected into anterior chamber immediately. But persistent Descemet's detachment and corneal edema was noted on second and third postoperative day. 1.4% Sodium hyaluronate was injected after which he developed an intraocular pressure (IOP) of 40 mm of Hg with persisting Descemet's detachment. On the fourth postoperative day, anterior chamber wash to clear viscoelastic was done and 0.2 ml of perfluro-n-octane was injected as a single bubble using a 26-gauge needle introduced through superotemporal peripheral cornea. The patient was given immediate head end elevated position which he was advised to maintain for 2 weeks. From the fifth postoperative day onward, the Descemet's membrane was found attached. Initially, the area of Descemet's detachment was seen as faintly thickened [Figure 1] which resolved at 1 week after perfluro-n-octane injection [Figure 2]. His corneal edema cleared dramatically with improvement of unaided visual acuity to 20/60. Fifteen days after perfluro-n-octane injection, the bubble was aspirated and thorough anterior chamber wash was given. At no point in follow-up after perfluro-n-octane injection, elevated IOP or uveitis was noted. At 6 weeks follow-up, the patient was having a clear cornea [Figure 3] with unaided visual acuity of 20/50. The central corneal thickness by ultrasonic pachymetry was 517 μm before phacoemulsification, 782 μm before intervention with perfluro-n-octane and 520 μm after removal of perfluro-n-octane. Specular microscopy was performed at another center at 6 months follow-up with endothelial cell density of 2639 cells/mm 2 in the right eye and 2481 cells/mm 2 in the left eye.
Figure 1: Perfluro-n-octane bubble in anterior chamber with the area of Descemet's detachment seen as faint thickening. The superior extent of the area of Descemet's detachment is highlighted by the arrow heads

Click here to view
Figure 2: Haziness in the area of Descemet's detachment has cleared by 1 week. Perflurocarbon liquids bubble is seen in anterior chamber

Click here to view
Figure 3: One-month follow-up showing clear cornea with no evidence of Descemet's detachment

Click here to view



  Discussion Top


Descemet's detachment can be instrument induced (scroll like) or due to injection of fluid (attached to stroma all around the detachment). [1] Descemet's membrane detachment can also be classified into planar type with the Descemet's membrane separation of less than 1 mm and non-planar type with a separation of greater than 1 mm. Planar detachments are more likely to resolve spontaneously, and non-planar detachments should be repaired early. [2] Bilateral Descemet's detachment can be due to abnormal adhesion of Descemet's membrane. Small localized Descemet's detachment usually resolves spontaneously, but large one needs intervention in the form of intracameral air, C3F8 or viscoelastic. [3] Since air or gas floats up, inferior Descemet's detachment extending to periphery of cornea may not get attached as in our case.

Perflurocarbon liquids (PFCLs) were initially developed as blood substitute for their property to transport oxygen and their biologic inertness. PFCL is used because of high specific gravity and immiscibility with water for complex retinal procedures like giant retinal tear surgery. Few reports about retained PFCL in anterior chamber after vitreo-retinal surgery are available in literature, which suggest inflammatory response and corneal toxicity after prolonged exposure of several months. But all these reports are for perflurodecalin. [4],[5] Toxicity with PFCL occurs due to hydrogen containing compounds, unsaturated carbon bonds and impurities like compounds with nitrogen bonds and hydrogen fluoride containing compounds. [6] Experimental animal studies using rabbit eyes showed that PFCL caused corneal endothelial toxicity. [7],[8] Mertens et al., based on their in vitro study on the effect of perflurodecalin on human retinal pigment epithelium and corneal endothelium, suggest the damage is caused by mechanical effect on cell function by impeding the normal metabolic exchange. [9] Peyman et al. caution against the use of PFCL for short- or long-term retinal tamponade in aphakic eyes considering the anterior segment toxicity of PFCL. [6] But Weinberger et al. followed up seven eyes with retained PFCL in anterior chamber for a mean follow-up of 9.4 months and showed that retained PFCL in anterior segment did not cause corneal toxicity or ocular inflammation. [10]

We have observed a patient with retained perfluro-n-octane bubble in anterior chamber following dislocated nucleus removal via anterior chamber for 3 months without inflammation or elevated IOP (not reported). Based on the personal experience of that case, we decided to manage this patient with PFCL (perfluro-n-octane).

The difference in endothelial cell density between the two eyes was 158 cells/mm2. In routine cataract surgery, an endothelial cell loss of 2-10%, and in complicated cataract surgery a loss of 16-20% is possible. [11] In the case being reported here, the difference in specular count between the two eyes was less than 10% and this loss can be explained by the Descemet's detachment as well as by the repeated manipulations. The central corneal thickness almost approximated the pre-operative thickness after removing PFCL though the PFCL bubble was in contact with nearly 50% of central cornea. Hence, we consider that perfluro-n-octane was effective in attaching inferior Descemet's detachment and safe in anterior chamber for a period of 2 weeks in this patient intervened by us. This is the first case of inferior Descemet's detachment managed by intracameral PFCL to be reported as far as our knowledge is concerned (PubMed key words used were Descemet's detachment + cataract surgery, repair of Descemet's detachment, Descemet's detachment + perfluro-n-octane, Descemet's detachment + PFCL, intracameral PFCL).

 
  References Top

1.
Bhattacharjee H, Bhattacharjee K, Medhi J, Altaf A. Descemet's membrane detachment caused by inadvertent vancomycin injection. Indian J Ophthalmol 2008;56:241-3.  Back to cited text no. 1
[PUBMED]  Medknow Journal  
2.
Mackool RJ, Holtz SJ. Descemet membrane detachment. Arch Ophthalmol 1977;95:459-63.  Back to cited text no. 2
[PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]  
3.
Kim IS, Shin JC, Im CY, Kim EK. Three Cases of Descemet's Membrane Detachment after Cataract Surgery. Yonsei Med J 2005;46:719-23.   Back to cited text no. 3
[PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]  
4.
Cauchi P, Azuara-Blanco A, McKenzie J. Corneal toxicity and inflammation secondary to retained perfluorodecalin. Am J Ophthalmol 2005;140:322-3.  Back to cited text no. 4
[PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]  
5.
Wilbanks GA, Apel AJ, Jolly SS, Devenyi RG, Rootman DS. Perfluorodecalin corneal toxicity: five case reports. Cornea 1996;15:329-34.  Back to cited text no. 5
[PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]  
6.
Peyman GA, Schulman JA, Sullivan B. Perfluorocarbon liquids in ophthalmology. Surv Ophthalmol 1995;39:375-95.  Back to cited text no. 6
[PUBMED]    
7.
Moreira H, de Queiroz JM Jr, Liggett PE, McDonnell PJ. Corneal toxicity study of two perfluorocarbon liquids in rabbit eyes. Cornea 1992;11:376-9.  Back to cited text no. 7
[PUBMED]    
8.
Stolba U, Krepler K, Velikay M, Binder S. Anterior segment changes in rabbits after experimental aqueous replacement with various amounts of different perfluorocarbon liquids. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 1999;237:501-7.  Back to cited text no. 8
[PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]  
9.
Mertens S, Bednarz J, Richard G, Engelmann K. Effect of perfluorodecalin on human retinal pigment epithelium and human corneal endothelium in vitro. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2000;238:181-5.  Back to cited text no. 9
[PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]  
10.
Weinberger D, Goldenberg-Cohen N, Axer-Siegel R, Gaton DD, Yassur Y. Long-term follow-up of perfluorocarbon liquid in the anterior chamber. Retina 1998;18:233-7.  Back to cited text no. 10
[PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]  
11.
Diseases of Cornea. In: Sihota R, Tandon R, editors. Parson's diseases of the eye. 21 st ed. India: Elsevier; 2011. p. 214.  Back to cited text no. 11
    


    Figures

  [Figure 1], [Figure 2], [Figure 3]


This article has been cited by
1 Relational Agency as a Dialectic of Belonging and Not Belonging within the Social Ecology of Plantation Life in Sri Lanka
Ann L. Cunliffe, Geetha Karunanayake
Journal of Organizational Sociology. 2023; 0(0)
[Pubmed] | [DOI]
2 Descemet membrane detachment
Deepali Singhal, Pranita Sahay, Siddhi Goel, Mohamed Ibrahime Asif, Prafulla K. Maharana, Namrata Sharma
Survey of Ophthalmology. 2020; 65(3): 279
[Pubmed] | [DOI]
3 Descemetęs membrane detachment in horses; case series and literature review
Mąrian Matas Riera,David Donaldson,Simon Lawrence Priestnall
Veterinary Ophthalmology. 2014; : n/a
[Pubmed] | [DOI]
4 Update on diagnosis and management of Descemet's membrane detachment
Vanissa Wing See Chow,Tushar Agarwal,Rasik B. Vajpayee,Vishal Jhanji
Current Opinion in Ophthalmology. 2013; 24(4): 356
[Pubmed] | [DOI]



 

Top
 
 
  Search
 
    Similar in PUBMED
   Search Pubmed for
   Search in Google Scholar for
 Related articles
    Access Statistics
    Email Alert *
    Add to My List *
* Registration required (free)  

 
  In this article
Abstract
Case Report
Discussion
References
Article Figures

 Article Access Statistics
    Viewed4007    
    Printed66    
    Emailed4    
    PDF Downloaded280    
    Comments [Add]    
    Cited by others 4    

Recommend this journal