Neuronal complications of intravitreal silicone oil: an updated review.
Grzybowski Andrzej, Pieczynski Janusz, Ascaso Francisco J
AI Summary
This review found pre-existing glaucoma and optic nerve abnormalities are the main risk factors for neuronal complications from intravitreal silicone oil, guiding safer use and MRI screening.
Abstract
Silicone oil (SiO) has a well-established role as a long-term endotamponade agent in the management of complicated retinal detachments. Complications of intraocular SiO include keratopathy, glaucoma, cataract and subretinal migration of the oil droplets. SiO tamponade can also lead to a severe optic neuropathy caused by retrolaminar migration. Nevertheless, intracranial migration of the SiO through the optic nerve posterior to the lamina cribrosa to the optic chiasm and brain is uncommon. The mechanism is still under debate, but it has been suggested elevated intraocular pressure, macrophages or optic nerve head anatomical predispositions as potential explanations. Moreover, central scotoma may develop in eyes with SiO not only at the time of oil removal, but also during the period of tamponade. We performed a PubMed search of neuronal complications of silicone oil over a period of 25 years. This review summarizes our current understanding of the specific pathogenic mechanisms of intraocular SiO neuronal side effects, concluding that pre-existing glaucoma and optic nerve abnormalities are the main risk factors associated with this damage. In their absence, the risk of extraocular SiO penetration is so low that the use of SiO endotamponade in complex retinal detachment patients does not need to be modified. MRI images to assess extraocular SiO migration are only necessary in very few and special cases, such as patients with optic nerve abnormalities and glaucoma.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Related Articles5
Automated MRI-based quantification of posterior ocular globe flattening and recovery after long-duration spaceflight.
Observational StudyBLOOD CHROMIUM-COBALT LEVELS IN PATIENTS AFTER TOTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY AND THEIR EFFECT ON THE RETINAL NERVE FIBER LAYER AND MACULAR GANGLION CELL COMPLEX.
Cohort StudyOptic disk appearance in advanced age-related macular degeneration.
Retrospective StudyChanges in Blood Flow on Optic Nerve Head After Vitrectomy for Rhegmatogenous Retinal Detachment.
Observational StudyDissociated optic nerve fiber layer appearance after internal limiting membrane peeling for idiopathic macular hole.
Case ReportIs this article assigned to the wrong chapter(s)? Let us know.