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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Rohan Bir Singh, M.B.B.S.[2]

Overview

Glaucoma is a group of diseases affecting the optic nerve that results in vision loss and is frequently characterized by raised intraocular pressure (IOP). There are many glaucoma surgeries, and variations or combinations of those surgeries, that facilitate the escape of excess aqueous humor from the eye to lower intraocular pressure, and a few that lower IOP by decreasing the production of aqueous.

Surgery

  • Surgery therapy of glaucoma is undertaken when:
  1. medical therapy is not appropriate, not tolerated, not effective, or not properly utilized by a particular patient
  2. the glaucoma remains uncontrolled with either documented progressivedamage or a very high risk of further damage.
  • Surgery is usually the primary approach for infantile and pupillary-blockglaucoma.
  • When surgery is indicated, the clinical setting must guide the selection of the appropriate procedure.
  1. trabeculectomy and its variations
  2. non-penetrating filtration procedures
  3. glaucoma drainage tube implants
  4. angle surgery for congenital glaucoma
  5. ciliary body ablation.
  6. iridectomy
  7. gonioplasty

Surgery For Open Angle Glaucoma

  • Surgery is indicated when IOP cannot be maintained by nonsurgical therapies at a level considered low enough to prevent further pressure-related damage to theoptic nerve or visual field loss. Surgery has traditionally been considered only

when medical therapy has failed and is associated with long-term risks of blebassociated problems, cataracts, and infection.

  • The glaucoma may be uncontrolled for various reasons:
  1. Maximal medical therapy fails to adequately reduce IOP
  2. The amount of medical therapy necessary to control IOP is not well tolerance or places the patient at unacceptable risk
  3. Optic nerve cupping or visual field loss is progressing despite apparent “adequate” reduction of IOP with medical therapy.
  4. The patient cannot comply with the necessary medical regimen

Laser Trabeculoplasty (LTP)[1]

  • Mechanism of action
  • LTP stimulates the growth of trabecular meshwork endothelial cells → restorestrabecular meshwork function → improves the outflow facility
  • Indications
  1. Patients with glaucoma on maximum tolerated medical therapy who require lower IOP and in whom the angle is open on gonioscopy.
  2. LTP effectively reduces IOP in patients with POAG, pigmentary glaucoma, and exfoliation syndrome. Aphakic and pseudophakic eyes may respond less favorably than phakic eyes; therefore, LTP may be more effective before than after cataract surgery.
  3. The role of initial LTP in POAG is at least as effective as medications for the first 2 years. LTP may postpone the need for conventional surgery or additional medications. When effective, LTP is expected to lower IOP 20%-25%.
  • Relative contraindications
  1. Inflammatory glaucoma
  2. Membrane in the angle
  3. Young patients who have developmental defects.
  4. The lack of effect in the fellow eye
  • Preoperative evaluation
  1. Optic nerve evaluation
  2. Visual field examination
  3. Gonioscopy to check that the angle must be open. The amount of pigment in the angle will help determine the laser settings for argon laser; a more pigmented angleresponds to lower laser energy
  • Argon laser procedure
  1. Set at 300-1000 mW, 50 um, and 0.1 second.Laser beam is focused through a gonio lens at the junction of the anterior unpigmented and the posterior pigmented edge of the trabecular meshwork.
  2. Laser energy was applied to the entire circumference (360°) of the trabecular meshwork. End point: blanching of the trabecular meshwork or production of a tiny bubble. If a large bubble appears, the power is reduced.
  3. Application to the posterior trabecular meshwork tends to produce inflammation, pigment dispersion, prolonged elevation of IOP, and PAS.
  4. Diode laser procedure: is similar; set at 600-1000 mW, 75 um, and 0.02second.
  • Complications
  1. Transient rise in IOP (occurs in 20% of patients), usually evident within thefirst 2-4 hours after treatment. Topical medications shown to blunt the IOPspikes include alpha2-agonists, beta blockers, pilocarpine, and topical CAIs. Hyperosmotic agents, oral CAIs, and ice packs may be helpful in eyes with IOP spikes not responsible to topical medication.
  2. Low-grade iritis
  3. Persistent elevation of IOP requiring filtering surgery
  4. Hyphema
  5. Formation of PAS
  6. Re-treatment of an angle that has been fully treated has a lower success rate and a higher complication rate than does primary treatment. If initial LTP fails tobring IOP under control, a trabeculectomy should be considered.

Selective Laser Trabeculoplasty[2]

  • Q-switched 532 nm Nd:YAG laser trabeculoplasty,the laser targets intracellular melanin.

Incisional Surgery for Open Angle Glaucoma

  1. The goal of filtering surgery (fistulizing procedure) is to create a new pathway(fistula) for the bulk flow of aqueous humor from the anterior chamber throughthe surgical defect in the sclera into the subconjunctival and sub-Tenon’s space.
  2. The filtering procedure most commonly used is guarded trabeculectomy.
  • Indications: a patient with glaucoma on maximum tolerable medical therapy (MTMT) who has had maximal laser benefit and whose optic nerve function is failing or is likely to fail.The physician can determine that the patient is at MTMT only by advancing therapy beyond the tolerated level and documenting intolerance. An alternative concept is core therapy, in which treatment consists of those medications likelyto work well in combination.
  • Relative contraindications
  1. Blind eye → ciliary body ablation is a better alternative for lowering IOP
  2. Active anterior segment neovascularization (rubeosis iridis) or active iritis → the underlying problem should be addressed first, or a surgical alternativesuch as tube implant surgery should be considered.
  3. Sustained extensive conjunctival injury or extremely thin sclera fromextensive prior surgery or necrotizing scleritis.
  4. Younger or aphakic/pseudophakic patients.
  5. Black patients.
  6. Patients with uveitic glaucoma or with previously failed filtration procedures
  • Preoperative evaluation
  1. The patient must be medically stable for an invasive ocular procedure under local anesthesia.
  2. Control of preoperative inflammation with corticosteroids helps to reducepostoperative iritis and scarring of the filtering bleb.
  3. Anticholinesterase agents should be discontinued if possible and replacedtemporarily by alternative medications at least 2-3 weeks before surgery toreduce bleeding and iridocyclitis.
  4. IOP should be reduced as close as possible to normal levels before surgery isperformed, to minimize the risk of expulsive choroidal hemorrhage.
  5. Antiplatelet medications should be discontinued.
  6. Systemic hypertension should be controlled.
  7. Patient should be informed :
  • The purpose and expectations of surgery: to arrest or delay progressive visual loss caused by their glaucoma.
  • Glaucoma surgery alone rarely improves vision.
  • Glaucoma medications may still be required postoperatively
  • Surgery may fail completely
  • Vision could be lost as a result of surgery
  • Glaucoma may progress despite successful surgery
  • Patients with far advanced visual field loss or field loss that is impinging on fixation are at risk for total loss of central acuity following a surgical procedure. The possible mechanism of this phenomenon include:
  • Cystoid macular edema
  • Early postoperative IOP spiking
  • Shifting of the lamina, further compromising remaining axons
  • Optic nerve ischemia, possibly related to regional anesthesia

Trabeculectomy

  • A guarded partial-thickness filtering procedure performed by removing ablock of limbal tissue beneath a scleral flap. The scleral flap providesresistance and limits the outflow of aqueous, thereby reducing the complications associated with early hypotony (such as flat anterior chamber, cataract, serous and hemorrhagic choroidal effusion, macular edema, and optic nerve edema)
  • The use of antifibrotic agents (such as mitomycin-C and 5-fluorouracil),combined with techniques of releasable sutures or laser suture lysis, enhancesthe longevity of guarded procedures.
  • Succesful trabeculectomy surgery:
  1. Involves reducing IOP and avoiding or managing complications
  2. Depends on appropriate and timely postoperative intervention to influencethe functioning of the filter.
  3. Complete healing of the epithelial and conjunctival wound with incompletehealing of the scleral wound is the goal of this procedure.
  • Trabeculectomy procedure :
  • Preoperative evaluation
  • Exposure.
  • A corneal traction suture or superior rectus bridle suture can rotate the globe down, giving excellent exposure of the superior sulcus and limbus.
  • Conjunctival wound.
  • Fornix-based conjunctival flap → provides better exposure at the limbus; more difficult to achieve a water-tight closure.
  • Limbal-based conjunctival flap → technically more challenging but allows for a secure closure well away from the limbus.
  • Scleral flap (3-4 mm trapezoidal or rectangular flap).
  • The flap is dissected anteriorly into clear cornea.
  • Paracentesis
  • To control the anterior chamber through instillation of BSS or viscoelastic
  • Allows for gradual lowering of IOP
  • Intraoperative testing of the patency of the filtration site as well as of the integrity of the conjunctival closure.
  • Sclerotomy (with a punch or with sharp dissection).
  • The size of the ostomy is determined by the scleral flap and the amount of overlap desired by the surgeon.
  • A small amount of tissue should remain at the edges of the ostomy to allow for resistance to outflow from the flap.
  • Iridectomy
  • To lessen the risk of iris occluding the ostomy
  • To reduce the risk of pupillary block
  • Closure of scleral flap
  • With the advent of laser suture lysis and releasable sutures, many surgeons close the flap relatively tightly to avoid early shallow chambers. After a few days, flap sutures are released to promote filtration.
  • Flow should be tested around the flap before closing the conjunctiva.
  • Leakage around the flap may be adjusted intraoperatively by the placement of additional sutures, removal of sutures, or application of cautery to shrink the wound edges.
  • Closure of conjunctiva
  • Fornix-based flap → conjunctiva is secured at the limbus
  • Limbal-based flap → conjunctiva and Tenon’s capsule are closed separately or in a single layer.
  • Postoperative management
  • Topical antibiotics and corticosteroids
  • Topical cycloplegic agents or mydriatics
  • Sub-Tenon’s corticosteroids or a short course of systemic corticosteroids
  • Antifibrotic agents
  • 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), a pyrimidine analogue
  • 5-FU → deoxynucleotide 5-fluoro-2’-deoxyuridine 5’-monophosphate (FdUMP) → interferes with DNA synthesis through its action on thymidylate synthetase
  • Inhibits fibroblast proliferation; reduces scarring after filtering surgery.
  • 50 mg/ml on a surgical sponge is used intraoperatively.
  • A total of 5 mg in 0.1-0.5 cc can be injected postoperatively.
  • Mitomycin-C (MMC), derived from Streptomyces caespitosus
  • Acts as an alkylating agent after enzyme activation resulting in DNA crosslinking.
  • Most commonly administered intraoperatively by placing a surgical sponge soaked in MMC within the subconjunctival space in contact with sclera at the planned trabeculectomy site.
  • Concentrations are typically between 0.2 and 0.4 mg/ml with a duration of application from 1 to 4 minutes
  • They should be used with caution in primary trabeculectomies on young myopic patients because of an increased risk of hypotony.
  • Techniques allowing tighter initial wound closure of the scleral flap help toprevent early postoperative hypotony.
  • The use of releasable flap sutures
  • The placement of additional sutures that can be cut postoperatively.
  • Laser suture lysis
  • Early complications:
  1. Infection
  2. Hypotony
  3. Flat anterior chamber
  4. Aqueous misdirection
  5. Hyphema
  6. Formation or acceleration of cataract
  7. Transient IOP elevation
  8. Cystoid Macular Edema
  9. Hypotony maculopathy
  10. Choroidal effusion
  11. Suprachoroidal hemorrhage
  12. Persistent uveitis
  13. Dellen formation
  14. Loss of vision
  • Late complications:
  1. Leakage or failure of the filtering bleb
  2. Cataract
  3. Blebitis,
  4. Endophthalmitis (bleb infection)
  5. Symptomatic bleb (dysesthetic bleb)
  6. Bleb migration
  7. Hypotony
  • Full Thickness Sclerotomy
  1. A block of limbal tissue is removed with a punch, trephine, laser or cautery.
  2. Advantages: IOP can be lowered and maintained at a lower level for long periods of time.
  3. Disadvantages: higher incidence of postoperative flat anterior chamber, cataract, hypotony, choroidal effusion, leakage of filtering blebs, and endophthalmitis.
  • Combined Cataract & Filtering Surgery
  • Indications
  1. Glaucoma that is uncontrollable either medically or after laser trabeculoplasty when visual function is significantly impaired by a cataract
  2. Cataract requiring extraction in a glaucoma patient who has advanced visual field loss
  3. Cataract requiring extraction in a glaucoma patient requiring medications to control IOP in whom medical therapy is poorly tolerated
  4. Cataract requiring extraction in a glaucoma patient who requires multiple medications to control IOP
  • Contraindications
  1. Glaucoma that requires a very low target IOP
  2. Advanced glaucoma with uncontrolled IOP and immediate need for successful reduction of IOP, thus Glaucoma surgery alone is preferred.

Surgery for Angle Closure Glaucoma

  • The first clinical decision point following the diagnosis of ACG is to distinguish between angle closure based on a pupillary block mechanism and angle closure based on another mechanism.
  • The treatment of pupillary-block glaucoma, whether primary or secondary, is a laser or an incisional iridectomy
  • For eyes with secondary angle closure not caused by pupillary block, an attempt should be made to identify and treat underlying conditions.

Laser Iridectomy

  • Indications
  1. The presence of pupillary block
  2. The need to determine the presence of pupillary block
  3. To prevent pupillary block in an eye considered at risk, as determined by gonioscopic evaluation or because of an angle-closure attack in the fellow eye:#This procedure provides an alternative route for aqueous trapped in the posterior chamber to enter the anterior chamber, allowing the iris to recede from its occlusion of the trabecular meshwork.
  • Contraindications: active rubeosis iridis, systemic anticoagulants consumption, angle closure not caused by a pupillary block mechanism
  • Preoperative consideration
  1. The glaucoma attack should be attempted medically, then proceed to surgery.
  2. Care should be taken to keep the iridectomy peripheral and covered by eyelid, if possible, to avoid monocular diplopia.
  3. Pilocarpine may be helpful by stretching and thinning the iris
  4. Apraclonidine or other agents can help blunt IOP spikes
  • Technique
  1. Set the argon laser at 800-1000 mW, 50 um, 0.02-0.1 second, using a condensing contact lens. There are a number of variations in technique, and iris color dictates which technique is chosen. Complications include localized lens opacity, acute rise in IOP, transient or persistent iritis, early closure of the iridectomy, and corneal and retinal burns
  2. Q-switched Nd:YAG laser generally requires fewer pulses and less energy. The effectiveness of this laser is not affected by iris color. With a condensing contact lens, the typical initial laser setting is 2-8 mJ. Complications include corneal burns, disruption of the anterior lens capsule or corneal endothelium, bleeding, postoperative IOP spike, inflammation, and delayed closure of the iridectomy.
  • Postoperative care
  1. Bleeding → particularly with Nd:YAG laser; compression of the eye with the laser lens will tamponade the vessel, or argon laser can be used to coagulate the vessel.
  2. IOP spikes → can be treated as described in the section on LTP
  3. Inflammation → topical corticosteroids
  • Complications
  1. Focal lens damage. It can be avoided by ceasing the procedure as soon as the iris is penetrated
  2. Retinal detachment is very rare, associated with Nd:YAG laser.
  3. Bleeding and IOP spike

Laser Gonioplasty or Peripheral Iridioplasty

  • Indications
  1. ACG resulting from plateau iris syndrome and nanophthalmos.
  2. To open the angle temporarily, in anticipation of a more definitive laser or incisional iridectomy.
  • Contraindications: active rubeosis iridis, systemic anticoagulants consumption, angle closure not caused by a pupillary block mechanism
  • Technique
  1. Set the argon laser at 200-500 mW, 200-500 um, 0.1-0.5 second
  2. Stromal burns are created in the peripheral iris to cause contraction and flattening.

Incisional Surgery for Angle Closure

  • Peripheral iridectomy may be required if a patent iridectomy cannot beachieved with a laser (cloudy cornea, flat anterior chamber, insufficient patient

cooperation)

  • Cataract extraction might be considered when pupillary block is associated with a visually significant cataract.
  • Chamber deepening and goniosynechialysis may break PAS.

Glaucoma Tube Shunt

  • Types of glaucoma drainage devices
  1. Resistance (valved) or flow-restricted devices: Krupin, Ahmed
  2. Nonresistance (nonvalved) devices: Molteno, Baelveldt
  3. Anterior chamber tube shunt to an encircling band (ACTSEB) – Schocket procedure
  • Indications
  1. Trabeculectomy failure
  2. Failed trabeculectomy with antifibrotics
  3. Active uveitis
  4. Neovascular glaucoma
  5. Inadequate conjunctiva
  6. Impending need for penetrating keratoplasty
  7. Others: poor candidate for trabeculectomy, potential for visual acuity, need for lower IOP
  • Contraindications
  1. Eyes with very poor visual potential
  2. Patients unable to comply with self-care in the postoperative period.
  3. Borderline corneal endothelial function
  • Preoperative considerations
  1. The status of the conjunctiva
  2. The health of the sclera at the anticipated tube and external reservoir sites
  3. The location of vitreous in the eye
  • Technique for implantation:
  1. The superotemporal quadrant is preferred.
  2. The extraocular plate or valve mechanism is sutured between the vertical and horizontal rectus muscles posterior to the muscle insertions.
  3. The tube is routed anteriorly to enter in the chamber angle or through the pars plana for posterior implantation in eyes that have had a vitrectomy.
  4. The tube is covered with tissue such as sclera, pericardium, or dura to help prevent erosion.
  • Postoperative management: topical steroids, antibiotics, and cycloplegics; IOP monitoring
  • Complications: tube-corneal touch, flat chamber and hypotony, tube occlusion, tube migration, valve malfunction, tube or plate exposure or erosion

Ciliary Body Ablation Procedures=

  • Procedures: cyclocryotherapy, diathermy, therapeutic ultrasound, thermal lasers (continuous Nd:YAG, argon, diode)
  • Goal: To reduce aqueous secretion by destroying a portion of the cilary body.
  • Indications
  1. Eyes that have poor visual potential or are poor candidates for incisional surgery → generally reserved for eyes that have been or are likely to be unresponsive to other modes of therapy.
  • Contraindications: eyes with good vision
  • Preoperative evaluation: same as for incisional glaucoma surgery
  • Postoperative management: analgesics, narcotics
  • Complications: prolonged hypotony, pain, inflammation, cystoid macular edema, hemorrhage, phthisis bulbi

Cyclodialysis

  • Indications: aphakic patients who have not responses to filtering surgery.
  • Techniques
  1. A small scleral incision is made approximately 4 mm from the limbus.
  2. A fine spatula is passed under the sclera into the anterior chamber.
  3. This spatula disinserts a portion of the ciliary muscle from the scleral spur and creates a cleft in the angle, providing direct communication between the anterior chamber and the suprachoroidal space.
  • Complications: bleeding, inflammation, cataract, stripping of Descemet’s membrane, profound hypotony.

Non Penetrating Procedures

  1. Deep sclerectomy with collagen implant
  2. Deep sclerectomy with injection of viscoelastic into Schlemm’s canal (viscocanalostomy)
  3. Involve creation of a superficial scleral flap and a deeper scleral dissection underneath to leave behind only a thin layer of sclera and Descemet’s membrane.

Surgeries for Congenital Glaucoma

Goniotomy & Trabeculectomy

  • Indications: childhood glaucoma
  • Contraindications: infants with unstable health, multiple anomalies with poor prognosis and a grossly disorganized eye.
  • Technique
  1. The anterior chamber should be filled with viscoelastic to prevent collapse and to tamponade bleeding.
  2. Goniotomy → A needle-knife is passed across the anterior chamber, and a superficial incision is made in the anterior aspect of the trabecular meshwork under gonioscopic control.
  3. Trabeculotomy → A fine wirelike instrument (trabeculotome) is inserted into Schlemm’s canal from an external incision, and the trabecular meshwork is torn by rotating the trabeculotome into the anterior chamber.
  4. Goniotomy is possible only in an eye with a relatively clear cornea, whereas trabeculotomy can be performed whether the cornea is clear or cloudy.

References

  1. Geffen, Noa; Assia, Ehud I.; Melamed, Shlomo (2017). "Laser-Assisted Techniques for Penetrating and Nonpenetrating Glaucoma Surgery". 59: 100–112. doi:10.1159/000458490. ISSN 0250-3751.
  2. Schlote, Torsten (2017). "Stellenwert der selektiven Lasertrabekuloplastik (SLT)". Klinische Monatsblätter für Augenheilkunde. doi:10.1055/s-0043-102946. ISSN 0023-2165.

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