关键词: Intraoperative amaurosis case series intraocular surgery macular diseases sub-Tenon’s anesthesia surgical outcome

Mesh : Anesthesia, Local / adverse effects methods Blindness / epidemiology etiology psychology rehabilitation Evoked Potentials, Visual Follow-Up Studies Fovea Centralis / diagnostic imaging surgery Humans Incidence Intraoperative Complications / epidemiology etiology psychology rehabilitation Nerve Block / adverse effects methods Phacoemulsification / adverse effects methods Postoperative Period Protective Factors Retinal Perforations / surgery Tenon Capsule / innervation Tomography, Optical Coherence Treatment Outcome Vitrectomy / adverse effects methods

来  源:   DOI:10.1177/0300060520925705   PDF(Sci-hub)   PDF(Pubmed)

Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: Some patients have been found to develop intraoperative amaurosis under sub-Tenon\'s anesthesia. We explored whether these patients have poor surgical outcomes during mid- to long-term postoperative follow-up.
METHODS: In this case series, 74 of 85 patients with macular diseases who underwent phacoemulsification combined with vitrectomy under sub-Tenon\'s anesthesia developed intraoperative amaurosis. The surgical outcomes at the 2- and 4-month follow-ups in these patients were investigated and compared with the outcomes in patients without amaurosis using best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), optical coherence tomography (OCT), and pattern visual evoked potential (PVEP).
RESULTS: Both BCVA and the OCT-based macular structure in patients with intraoperative amaurosis showed significant postoperative improvement comparable with that of patients without amaurosis. The presence of intraoperative amaurosis was not associated with either macular hole closure or macular edema regression. PVEP revealed no significant changes in the wave latency or amplitude before and after surgery.
CONCLUSIONS: Intraoperative amaurosis following sub-Tenon\'s block is commonly seen but does not predict a poor surgical prognosis. When a patient develops amaurosis during surgery, the surgeon should increase patient comfort through verbal communication rather than perform an additional intervention to help relieve the patient\'s anxiety.
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