1 / 18

Types of cataracts & general desc

Types of cataracts & general desc. posterior subcapsular (PSC) located in middle posterior lens near nodal point progresses rapidly smaller pupil significant nuclear middle part of lens graded on color (yellow or white; white more difficult to detect) myopic shift (2 nd sight) polar

kaipo
Download Presentation

Types of cataracts & general desc

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Types of cataracts & general desc • posterior subcapsular (PSC) • located in middle posterior lens near nodal point • progresses rapidly • smaller pupil significant • nuclear • middle part of lens • graded on color (yellow or white; white more difficult to detect) • myopic shift (2nd sight) • polar • located on posterior capsule • require more extensive surgery—cataract removed “from behind”

  2. symptoms of cataracts • rapid or gradual onset • decreased VA • glare and/or halos • double vision (monocular) • reduced color discrimination (esp. blues) • reduced contrast sensitivity • progressive nearsightedness • difficulties with night vision, seeing road signs at dusk, recognizing familiar faces at a distance.

  3. Overview of cataract surgery • outpatient procedure • takes ~15 minutes (at surgery center ~ 2 hours) • local anesthesia; lidocaine gel or sometimes retro-bulbar injection • small incision—2.8mm; angled to be self-sealing • no stitches; no patching • “phacoemulsification”—ultrasound waves used to break-up lens. Particles are then vacuumed out of the eye. • One eye at a time; 3-4 weeks between eyes.

  4. considerations for cataract surgery on glaucoma patients • continue glaucoma medication use before surgery • removing cataract can increase space  can decrease IOP • do not perform surgery until IOP is under control (low 20s at most).

  5. benefits of cataract surgery • reduce need for glasses • increase visual function • enhance visualation of the retina in certain eye conditions

  6. IOL options for cataract surgery • refractive error can be corrected in the lens—also discussed elective surgery for patients who cannot have LASIK. • haptic (hook that secures lens in place)—to—haptic distance ~13mm; lens diameter ~6mm • monofocal—lens has one power • monovision—one eye focused at distance; other focused at near • multifocal lenses—different points of focus (far, intermediate, near) • ReZoom® (Dr. Bias recommends) • ReStore®

  7. considerations for multifocal IOL cataract surgery • both eyes should be done (but not on same day) • both eyes healthy • pupil size—necessary to use concentric rings of IOL

  8. Things patient should expect after cataract surgery: • irritation • eye drops to be used for a month after surgery • change in Rx / new glasses

  9. post-op co-management of cataract patients • medications: • PredForte® or EconoPred 1% gttsqid for 1 month • Zymar® or Vigamox® (4th generation flouroquinolone) • Acular® until bottle is gone • eye shield worn at night for 1 week • no heavy lifting nor straining for 1 week • no swimming; no hot tubs for 1 week • Educate patient to RTC immediately for: • decreased vision • pain • redness • Follow-up Exams: • 1 day • 1 week • 1 month • Be sure to ask: • How is your vision? • Any pain? Nausea? Vomiting? (signs of high IOP) • Are you using the drops? shield? • Do you have any double vision?

  10. cataract co-management exam: 1-day post surgery exam • VAs: • without correction • with pinhole • IOP—Goldmann • SL exam • wound • cornea • AC depth • cells? flare? • pupil shape • IOL assessment • Reinforce instructions for drops, shield, etc.

  11. normal day 1 post cataract surgery signs/symptoms • periorbital bruising/echymosis • ptosis (mild) • FB sensation/scratchiness • subconjunctiva hemorrhage • corneal epithelial defect • corneal edema • 1+ to 2+ cells • smallhyphema • iris stromal atrophy (trauma) • posterior capsule striae

  12. abnormal day 1 post cataract surgery signs/symptoms • pain especially with nausea & vomiting • IOP < 8 • IOP > 30 • narrow or flat AC • 3 to 4+ cells • large hyphema • ANYhypopyon • corneal infiltrate • circumferential ciliary flush (Red Hot Eye)

  13. cataract co-management exam: 1-week post surgery exam • VA’s (without correction & with pinhole) • IOPsGoldmann • SLE (wound, cornea, AC depth, cells, pupil shape, IOL) • reinforce instructions • refract • discontinue antibiotic drops & shield • continue steroid gtts until gone • call to schedule 2nd eye

  14. normal day 7 post cataract surgery signs/symptoms • quiet AC • clear cornea

  15. abnormal day 7 post cataract surgery signs/symptoms • pain • significant conjunctival injection • elevated IOP • 2+ or higher cell • reduction in vision from day 1 post surgery exam • DFE should be done for cases where VA lower than expected • CME • macular issues • posterior capsule issues

  16. general cataract surgery complications • complications may occur 1 day to several months after surgery • early complications  more virulent (gram -) organisms  very serious infection; refer to surgeon immediately • later complications  low virulent organisms  most commonly Staphylococcus Epidermidis from lids & lashes

  17. “early” post cataract surgery complications • IOP spike (> 30) • more frequent in glaucoma patients; reason to continue drops • treat with aqueous suppressants (Alphagan P®) • IOP drop (< 8) • wound leaking • check for Seidel’s sign at both wound sites • treat with bandage CL, pressure patch, stitch, or rehydration.

  18. “late” cataract surgery complications • cystoid macular edema • can see ~1 month post surgery • more likely: • “bad” dense cataract • DM • surgical complications • treat with NSAIDs, peri-orbital steroids, time • posterior capsule opacity • can happen any time • refer back to surgeon • fixed out-patient with YAG • pseudo-phakicbullouskeratopathy (PBK) • RARE • too much endothelial damage or pre-existing corneal endothelial condition like Fuch’s • treat with Muro128 • patient may eventually require PK

More Related