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Home | News | Links | How to Help | Contact Us | Search Patient Information: Articles: Articles for Patients: Cataract Surgery and UveitisC. Stephen Foster, M.D. Cataract develops in patients with
uveitis because of the uveitis itself and also because of the
steroids which is the cornerstone of treating uveitis. Cataract
developing in an eye with a history of chronic or recurrent
uveitis has historically been called cataracta complicata, and,
indeed, the uveitic cataract is complicated cataract. It is
complicated both from the standpoint of technical aspects of the
surgery itself (limited access secondary to posterior synechiae,
pupillary membrane, and pupillary sphincter sclerosis, iris
delicacy and vascular abnormalities, and pre-existing glaucoma),
and also because of the high likelihood of an exuberant
postoperative inflammatory response which can ruin the desired
surgical outcome. But the increasing availability of more
delicate microsurgical techniques, through the use of pupil
expanders, visco elastic material, small incision
phacoemulsification techniques, etc. has dramatically reduced the
misadventures that use to be so common. Yet, despite these
advances surgeons are frequently still disappointed with the
visual outcome of cataract surgery in the patient with a history
of uveitis. This typically occurs as a result of two things:
damage done to the macula or optic nerve long before the time for
cataract surgery has arrived, through the consequences of
recurrent or chronic, even "low grade" inflammation;
and significant ongoing chronic or recurrent inflammation which
sabotages an initially good visual result from cataract surgery.
Both these problems are avoidable, but avoidance of structural
damage to areas of the eye critical for good vision requires a
philosophy, on the ophthalmologists part, of total
intolerance to chronic or recurrent inflammation, achieving the
goal of complete freedom of inflammation through a stepladder
algorithm approach in aggressiveness of therapy. Indeed,
prevention of cataract development in the first place often
derives from such a philosophy. And postoperative inflammatory
damage which sabotages an initially good visual outcome occurs,
generally, if the patient is prepared ahead of surgery with
treatment techniques that prevent exuberant inflammation
postoperatively, and prevent a recurrence of inflammation or a
continued low grade chronic inflammation longitudinally following
surgery. REFERENCES: 2. Foster CS, Fong LP, Singh G: Cataract Surgery and Intraocular Lens Implantation in Patients with Uveitis. Ophthalmology 1989; 96:281-288. 3. Foster RE, Lauder CY, Meisler DM, et al: Extracapsular cataract extraction with posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation in uveitis patients. Ophthalmology 1992; 99:1234-1241. 4. Gee SS, Tabbara KF: Extracapsular cataract extraction in Fuchs heterochromic iridocyclitis. Am J Ophthalmol 1989; 108:310-314. 5. Kaufman AH, Foster CS: Cataract extraction in pars planitis patients. Ophthalmology 1993; 100:1210-1217. 6. Seamone CD, Deschenes J, Jackson WB: Cataract extraction in uveitis: comparison of aphakia and posterior chamber lens implantation. Can J Ophthalmol 1992; 273:1231-124. |
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C. Stephen Foster M.D.
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