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Action on cataract Whipps Cross Hospital Harold Wood Hospital North East London Eye Partnership.

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Presentation on theme: "Action on cataract Whipps Cross Hospital Harold Wood Hospital North East London Eye Partnership."— Presentation transcript:

1 info@nelep.org.uk Action on cataract Whipps Cross Hospital Harold Wood Hospital North East London Eye Partnership

2 Cataract surgery Indications for surgery Surgical plan Surgical procedure Postoperative care Discharge

3 Indications Visually significant cataract Affecting quality of life Work Driving Reading Hobbies Activities of daily living No Snellen acuity limit! (except driving)

4 Surgical plan Mode of anaesthesia Surgical procedure Refraction Additional surgery Lens implant: power & material

5 Anaesthesia Local Topical Regional Peribulbar Retrobulbar Sub-Tenons sub-conjunctival General

6 Surgical procedure Pupil dilation cyclopentolate 1% + phenylephrine 2.5% Surface cleansing povidone iodine 5% Draping disposable self-adhesive waterproof drape Lid speculum Cataract removal Lens implantation

7 Cataract - phacoemulsification Section: cornea or scleral Viscoelastic instillation Capsulorrhexis Phacoemulsification Soft lens removal IOL implantation Viscoelastic removal

8 Additional surgery Pupil enlargement Refractive surgery Glaucoma Vitreoretinal Macular hole Epiretinal membrane peel Retinal detachment Vitrectomy for vitreous haemorrhage

9 Surgical section Self-sealing - sutureless Astigmatically neutral Position Temporal Superior on-axis Size: limited by IOL size – 3 to 3.5mm

10 Capsulorrhexis T Neuhann 1987 Theory and surgical technic of capsulorhexis Klin Monatsbl Augenheilkd 1987;190:542-5 “Kapsulorhexis is a surgical technique for opening the anterior lens capsule with a circular, smooth-edged and continuous margin. Basically, the technique consists of a precisely controlled continuous capsular tear (rhexis), using only a sharp disposable needle with a bent tip. The method is reproducible, requires minimal instrumentation, is compatible with all current techniques of extracapsular surgery, and can be learned at no risk.”

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12 Dense cataract without red reflex: Vision Blue

13 Phacoemulsification Charles Kelman 1967 – Cavitron Ultrasound fragmentation of lens 1967 - no capsulorrhexis or foldable IOLs Techniques Divide & conquer Nucleus chopping

14 Phaco – “divide and conquer”

15 Intraocular lens implants Rigid PMMA Foldable Silicone Acrylic – hydrophobic e.g. Acryosof Acrylic – hydrophilic e.g. Hydroview, Centerflex

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18 Complications – intra-operative >92% no intra-operative complications Posterior capsule rupture - around 4-5% Zonule dehiscence Vitreous loss Iris trauma & bleeding Corneal endothelial damage Thermal corneal burns Dropped nucleus or lens fragments

19 Post-operative care Clinic review: Next day unnecessary 7-14 days post-operative clinic review Topical therapy e.g Maxitrol x 4/3/2/1 per week Post-operative refraction Stability Attainment of target refraction Dispensing for non-emmetropic eyes e.g -3D target Laser capsulotomy

20 Discharge to Optometrist Refract & dispense at 4-6 weeks Refraction feedback for audit Visual outcome Target refraction & biometry precision Planned surgery on second eye Capsule opacification & Laser capsulotomy


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