Eyeworld

JAN 2014

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

Issue link: https://digital.eyeworld.org/i/233841

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 44 of 66

42 EW FEATURE Phaco and vitrectomy January 2014 Using triamcinolone in the anterior chamber by Michelle Dalton EyeWorld Contributing Writer Experts share their technique pearls, as well as optimal time for use Editors' note: This article discusses the off-label use of Kenalog and on-label use of Triesence. I t's not often vitreous comes forward during anterior segment surgery, but when it does the ability to see where the vitreous is to fully remove it is crucial. For years, surgeons have been using triamcinolone in an offlabel indication to help visualize the vitreous, with most surgeons following the methods first described by AT A GLANCE • Triamcinolone should be used in a preservative-free preparation and is both diagnostic and therapeutic. • Triamcinolone isn't helpful in the presence of viscoelastic, which blocks particulate identification of vitreous. • Triamcinolone is most useful at the end of vitrectomy to ensure no wayward strands are left and as the last maneuver to identify any representation of vitreous prolapse. Scott E. Burk, MD, PhD, in 2003.1 (Gholem Peymen, MD, first discovered particulate identification of the vitreous in the posterior segment with triamcinolone.) Kenalog (triamcinolone acetonide, Bristol-Myers Squibb, New York) "is a preserved medication, so when Dr. Burk wrote his seminal article, he showed how to remove the preservative with an 18 g filter needle," said Lisa B. Arbisser, MD, Eye Surgeons Associates, Bettendorf, Iowa, and clinical adjunct associate professor, University of Utah, John A. Moran Eye Center, Salt Lake City. The process was time consuming, and some people opted to use it "as is," preservatives and all, she said. Preservatives are not necessarily as much a concern during posterior segment surgery "but they're not healthy for the endothelium; Kenalog specifically notes it is not for ophthalmic use, so it must be diluted and prepared for the off-label use," she said. Triesence (triamcinolone acetonide, Alcon, Fort Worth, Texas) "is in a preservativefree medium, has a code so we can get paid for it, and is on-label, so I no longer use Kenalog." There are "numerous" versions of triamcinolone available off-label, including several that are preservative-free from compounding phar- Monthly Pulse T he Monthly Pulse survey for January focused on phaco and vitrectomy. For triamcinolone vitreous staining, a majority of respondents said they use Triesence (36.1%), while 29.1% said they don't use staining at all. As for using kenalog, 19.4% said they use it diluted in the OR and 12.4% said they use it undiluted. Three percent of respondents said they use a staining preparation compounded by a pharmacy. For significant vitreous prolapsing through a zonular dialysis following IOL insertion, the majority of respondents said they use a limbal vitrectomy (split infusion) through a phaco incision (49.2%), while 17.8% said they use a limbal vitrectomy through a new limbal incision, 17.2% said they use a pars plana anterior vitrectomy, 13.3% said they use a limbal vitrectomy (coaxial infusion) through a phaco incision, and 2.4% said they abort the case and macies, said Michael E. Snyder, MD, in practice at the Cincinnati Eye Institute, Ohio. For those who use the Kenalog meant for subcutaneous injection, "you need to wash off the triamcinolone crystals by suspending and aspirating it into a syringe, injecting the triamcinolone into a filter, resuspending it into a fresh syringe with balanced salt solution, and repeating that a few times to essentially wash off the crystals so the diluent in the commercial preparation doesn't cause any hazards just as Dr. Burk's original article describes," Dr. Snyder said. Both physicians agreed injecting Kenalog directly into the anterior chamber is inadvisable because "the diluent has some preservatives and alcohol in it that can be toxic to endothelium," Dr. Snyder said. When to use triamcinolone Dr. Snyder uses triamcinolone most often when he has planned a vitrectomy or during reconstruction cases. "The overwhelming majority of the time—and almost any time I'm using it—it's at the beginning of the case," Dr. Snyder said. "The challenge is that if you're already in the middle of the case, depending on what viscoelastic (OVD) you've already used and how much has been aspirated … it's very difficult to use triamcinolone in the presence of viscoelastic." The triamcinolone crystals will "stick" to the vitreous but be blocked by the OVD, he said. "The idea is to have the crystals blow around in the aqueous, insert some into the anterior chamber, the whole chamber will turn white, and add a little balanced salt solution. Once you rinse away the excess, crystals are stuck to the surface of the vitreous gel." In the "best of all worlds," as soon as a surgeon thinks vitreous has been lost or had a break in the posterior capsule or a complication, "you should immediately take out your second hand instrument and instill the diluted Triesence to see if there's any vitreous presenting and whether you've broken the posterior capsule," Dr. Arbisser said. Determine if the anterior hyaloid is intact or whether there is prolapse of vitreous forward and a non-intact hyaloid, she added. In reality, though, most surgeons will fill the eye with OVD (preferably a dispersive one), which is immediately at hand in all cases rather than wait for the Triesence to get everything to a static position Dr. Arbisser said. Putting triamcinolone into the chamber after the OVD prevents surgeons from seeing what's OVD and Keeping a Pulse on Ophthalmology refer it to a retina specialist. A majority of respondents said they encounter zonular abnormalities during phaco in post-vitrectomized eyes slightly more often compared to non-vitrectomized eyes (56.1%), while 29.6% saw no difference, 12.8% found the occurrence fairly common, and 1.5% said it was very common. If the surgeons themselves had an early nuclear sclerosis and were having an epiretinal membrane peeled for metamorphopsia, most respondents (36.7%) would choose to have phaco-IOL first and then a vitrectomy later if needed. Those who would choose vitrectomy first then phaco later when needed totaled 34.2%, while 21.2% would choose combined vitrectomy and IOL, and 7.9% would let their ophthalmologist decide on the best course.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Eyeworld - JAN 2014