Prevention of Endophthalmitis: Kurt Buzard, MD, Stergios Liapis, MD
Prevention of Endophthalmitis: Kurt Buzard, MD, Stergios Liapis, MD
Prevention of Endophthalmitis: Kurt Buzard, MD, Stergios Liapis, MD
PREVENTION OF ENDOPHTHALMITIS
safe entrance into the eye and surgery to proceed more easily
and the surgeon can grasp the wound edge for stabilization
when inserting instruments.
The blue-line incision technique has been described.26,27
Briefly, the incision is constructed superiorly at the 12 oclock
meridian. With the side of the diamond knife, a 4.0 mm
incision is created through the conjunctiva and Tenons tissue
about 1.5 to 2.0 mm behind the surgical limbus (represented
by the anatomic appearance of a blue line, representing the
adherence line of the conjunctiva). In most cases, the conjunctiva naturally sags away from the incision and the resulting
conjunctival gaping creates a miniperitomy (Figure 3, A).
Although bleeding is not a problem if the initial incision
does not significantly penetrate the sclera, the assistant continuously applies drops to maintain visualization of the exterior incision. Light cautery is applied when the incision is
completed. The knife is placed parallel to the posterior sclera,
and pressure is applied to slightly indent the sclera with the
PREVENTION OF ENDOPHTHALMITIS
Results
In the series of 5131 consecutive cataract procedures, the mean patient age was 69.6 years 10.9 (SD)
The mean follow-up was 2 years (range 3 months to
4 years). The mean surgical time was 10 minutes and
the mean phaco time, 0.6 minutes (Figures 5 and 6).
There were no cases of endophthalmitis. The posterior capsule ruptured in 0.10% of cases, and the
sclera was perforated from the retrobulbar block in
0.02% of cases. No eye had wound leak through the
primary cataract incision (flat or shallow anterior chamber) postoperatively.
1955
PREVENTION OF ENDOPHTHALMITIS
Discussion
The mean patient age in our study is consistent
with the mean age of the usual cataract population.
The relatively short surgery and phaco times increased
the chances for uneventful surgery and faster patient
rehabilitation.
Several steps are important in preventing endophthalmitis. These include the position and type of incision, surgical technique, and preventive antiseptic
regimen (eg, povidoneiodine preparation and subconjunctival antibiotic injection at the completion of
surgery).
Table 1 compares the surgical parameters in a series
of clinical studies. Phacoemulsification was the prevalent cataract procedure in most series. The incidence
of endophthalmitis after a temporal clear corneal incision was between 0.10% (Schmitz and coauthors30) and
0.57% (Kalpadakis et al.31) and after a superior scleral
tunnel incision, between 0.02%32 and 0.20%.33 In the
study by John and Noblitt,32 the incidence of endophthalmitis was 0.29% with a temporal clear corneal incision and 0.02% with a superior scleral tunnel incision
(odds ratio 14:1). In the Nagaki et al.34 study, the
incidence of endophthalmitis was 0.29% with a temporal clear corneal incision and 0.05% with a superior
sclerocorneal incision (relative odds ratio 4:6). In a
large-scale study by Schmitz and coauthors,30 the overall
incidence of endophthalmitis was 0.07% with a superior
scleral tunnel incision and 0.10% with a temporal clear
corneal incision. The generalized higher incidence of
postoperative infection with a clear corneal incision (up
to 0.57%, Kalpadakis et al.31) than with a scleral tunnel
1956
PREVENTION OF ENDOPHTHALMITIS
Table 1. Comparison of surgical parameters and prophylactic antibiotic regimen in endophthalmitis studies.
Surgical Parameters
Technique
Preop
Antibio
PI
Infusion
Antibio
Subcon
Inject
Endoph
Cases, n (%)
Phaco
ST/sup
Yes
Yes
Vancgent
No
1 (0.02)
Study*
Year
John32
19921996
5 216
32
John
19921996
3 126
Phaco
CC/temp
Yes
Yes
Vancgent
No
9 (0.29)
Speaker8
19891990
4 507
Phaco/ECCE
ST/sup
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
8 (0.18)
19891990
3 489
Phaco/ECCE
ST/sup
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
2 (0.06)
Phaco/ECCE
ST/sup
Yes (59%)
No
No
Yes
16 (0.07)
150 (0.07)
Speaker
5
Cases (n)
Prophylactic Regimen
Incision
Type/Location
19841989
22 791
30
Schmitz
19961999
214 599
Phaco
ST/sup
Yes (60%)
Yes (52%)
Schmitz30
19961999
54 501
Phaco
CC/temp
Yes (60%)
Yes (52%)
Phaco
CC/temp
No
No
Kattan
31
Kalpadakis
No
Yes
54
(0.1)
19961999
1 381
33
8 (0.57)
Montan
19901993
14 495
ECCE
Lim/sup
No
Yes
No
Yes
39 (0.27)
Montan33
19901993
7 490
Phaco
ST/sup
No
Yes
No
Yes
15 (0.20)
Aaberg2
19841989
23 124
Phaco/ECCE
ST/sup
Yes (58%)
Yes
No
Yes (96%)
17 (0.074)
Aaberg
19901994
18 530
Phaco/ECCE
ST/sup
No (76%)
Yes
No
Yes (79%)
17 (0.092)
15
Desai
19971998
19 000
Phaco/ECCE
ST/sup
No
Yes
No
No
5 (0.03)
Current
19972002
5 131
Phaco
BL/sup
No
Yes
No
Yes
Antibio antibiotics; BL blue line; CC clear corneal; ECCE extracapsular cataract extraction; Endoph endophthalmitis; gent
gentamicin; Lim limbal; Phaco phacoemulsification; PI povidoneiodine; ST scleral tunnel; Subcon Inject subconjunctival injection;
sup superior; temp temporal; Vanc vancomycin
*First author
1957
PREVENTION OF ENDOPHTHALMITIS
References
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Nosocomial acute-onset postoperative endophthalmitis
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Ophthalmology 1998; 105:10041010
3. Javitt JC, Vitale S, Canner JK, et al. National outcomes
of cataract extraction; endophthalmitis following inpatient surgery. Arch Ophthalmol 1991; 109:10851089
4. Powe NR, Schein OD, Gieser SC, et al. Synthesis of the
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PREVENTION OF ENDOPHTHALMITIS
1959