Eyeworld

SEP 2022

EyeWorld is the official news magazine of the American Society of Cataract & Refractive Surgery.

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32 | EYEWORLD | SEPTEMBER 2022 BACK TO BASICS ATARACT C by Ellen Stodola Editorial Co-Director About the physician David Lubeck, MD Director of Cataract, Cornea, and Advanced Anterior Segment Surgery Arbor Centers For Eyecare Homewood, Illinois Dr. Lubeck noted that other companies also have advanced phaco systems. Other options in this class of advanced fluidics systems include Bausch + Lomb's StableChamber using the Stellaris Vision Enhancement System and Johnson & Johnson Vision's hybrid fluidics using the Veritas Vision System, as well as the QUATERA 700 from Carl Zeiss Meditec. You want the most stable possible intraoc- ular environment for all procedures, Dr. Lubeck said, so once you use a machine with advanced fluidics, you won't want to go back to a less efficient system. Dr. Lubeck compared the switch to an advanced fluidics system as similar to transi- tioning from doing LASIK with a microkeratome to a laser. "Anyone who wants to be as safe and successful a cataract surgeon as possible will be working with an advanced fluidics system," he said. When transitioning from a gravity system to an advanced pressurized system, Dr. Lubeck said one of the challenges is that, in general, there isn't a deep understanding of fluidics. It can be hard for surgeons to explore and real- ize all the capabilities of the new system. New fluidics technology provides more safety and efficiency, he said, but often physicians don't fully maximize the benefits of these systems. A look at phaco fluidics U nderstanding the basic concept of phaco fluidics is important for successful cataract surgery, particu- larly when differentiating among the systems available and how they can help surgeons and patients. David Lubeck, MD, broke it down in a discussion with EyeWorld. In beginning to discuss this topic, Dr. Lubeck said you need to go back to the basic premise of phaco fluidics. Everything done in the system, every parameter in passive/gravity fluidics—including the bottle height, incision size, the phaco sleeve size, the second incision size, the height of the bed, the patient eye level, flow rate, vacuum setting, and the efficiency of the pump—is related to how stable the eye is going to be during cataract surgery. "You can't look at only one part of the system to determine the fluidics," he said. "You have to look at every piece of it to understand it, then if you want to maximize your intraocular stability, you have to be able to manipulate the different pieces of the system to your advantage." The first component in fluidics stability is the infusion pressure, the pressure of the fluid going into the eye and how well you can main- tain that at a constant level. When you have a gravity infusion system, the higher you raise the bottle, the higher the pressure you can create, but the more the pressure will drop when you have an occlusion break or when you have inef- ficiencies in the system beyond the fluid inflow, Dr. Lubeck said. "With a gravity fluidics system, you can raise the infusion pressure by raising the bottle, but in doing so you also are creating a higher gradient for surge and loss of intraocu- lar stability," he explained. Dr. Lubeck uses Active Fluidics with the Centurion Vision System (Alcon). With this system, he said the infusion of balanced salt solution is pressurized to a specific level. There is also a sensor and valve system in the machine that is constantly monitoring the pressure in the eye or the pressure in the tubing connected to the eye, and the valve is opening and closing in milliseconds to keep the intraocular environ- ment as stable as possible, Dr. Lubeck said. He thinks this option provides more control and stability of the intraocular pressure than using a gravity infusion system. Dr. Lubeck uses Active Fluidics with the Centurion Vision System. Source: David Lubeck, MD Contact Lubeck: dmaclubes@earthlink.net

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