UBM-guided chamber angle surgery for glaucoma management: an experimental study.
Dietlein T S, Engels B F, Jacobi P C, Krieglstein G K
AI Summary
This study showed ultrasound biomicroscopy (UBM) can guide angle surgery in pig eyes, visualizing instruments and tissue contact. This could offer real-time intraoperative control for glaucoma procedures.
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of this experimental study was to investigate the potential of ultrasound bimicroscopy (UBM)-guided chamber angle surgery as an alternative or supplement to gonioscopy and intraocular microendoscopy for intraoperative control.
Methods
In 15 porcine cadaver eyes, mechanical goniopuncture or punctual Er:YAG laser trabecular ablation was performed without operating microscope or gonioscopy, but with real-life ultrasound biomicroscopy monitoring with a 50 MHz transducer. Intraoperative localization of the microsurgical instruments and tissue-instrument contact were qualitatively evaluated.
Results
The instruments could be clearly visualized within the chamber angle and disturbing artefacts were only minimal when using mechanically fixed instruments in slow motion. Topographic localization, tissue contact, and penetration depth of the instruments entering the scleral were well illustrated as far as the technical resolution limits of UBM would allow.
Conclusions
UBM can be used intraoperatively to monitor the correct manoeuvring of microsurgical instruments in selected ab interno procedures. Some adaptations and further modifications of the technique presented here will be necessary before UBM-guided surgery can be considered for clinical use in humans.
MeSH Terms
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