Dec 13, 2015

converting to ECCE

Conversion to ECCE often comes at a difficult time. The lens is about to fall south, the vitreous has prolapsed and the surgeon is stressed. 

Understanding the steps and process of conversion to ECCE is essential and study before the crisis will help soothe the stress when this inevitable process occurs. We will cover several areas: identifying patients at risk for the need for conversion to ECCE, indications for conversion, conversion from topical to sub-tenon’s, wound preparation, expressing the lens material, closure of the wound, placement of the IOL, post operative issues and a brief section on anterior vitrectomy. For more detailed instructions please refer to: http://webeye.ophth.uiowa.edu/eyeforum/tutorials/Cataract-ECCE/Cataract-Surgery-Complex-Conversion-Extracaps-ECCE.htm

One of the most important parts of the pre-operative process for cataract patients is to assess the difficulty factors that may lead to conversion to ECCE or otherwise complicate the procedure. You may want to add operative time to your schedule or ask for additional equipment. You may want to change to a superior limbal wound which facilitates conversion to an ECCE rather than a temporal clear corneal incision. You may want to do a retrobulbar block rather than topical anesthesia as the case may last longer or is more likely to become complicated. Or you may want someone more experienced to do the case. for more detail on dkifficulty factors please see: http://www.medrounds.org/cataract-surgery-greenhorns/2005/09/chapter-1-assessment-difficulty.html

Conversion to ECCE is indicated when phacoemulsification is failing. Sometimes this is due to a very hard lens which does not submit to ultrasound or a lens that is hard enough that the surgeon is concerned that the required ultrasound energy will harm a tentative cornea, e.g. Fuchs’ endothelial dystrophy or posterior polymorphous dystrophy (PPMD). Sometimes one will convert to ECCE when an errant capsulorhexis goes radial especially with a hard crystalline lens when the surgeon is concerned that the risk of dropping the lens is too great with continued phacoemulsification. Rarely now with Trypan Blue dye, a surgeon will choose to convert to ECCE when the anterior capsule is hard to see and capsulorhexis must be completed with the can opener technique. More often the conversion is indicated when the crystalline lens is loose from weak zonules or a posterior capsule tear which make phacoemulsification less safe than extending the wound and removing the residual lens material. Indications for conversion to ECCE include: Hard crystalline lens or unstable endothelium, Radial tear in anterior capsule with hard lens, Poor visualization despite Trypan dye,
Posterior capsular tear, and Zonular dialysis.

Converting to subtenon’s anesthesia. Often we convert cases from topical clear corneal to ECCE. While the ECCE can be done under topical it is usually more comfortable and safer to give additional anesthetic which is typically a sub tenon’s injection of bupivicaine and lidocaine. This will provide some akinesia and additional anesthesia. There is usually subconjunctival hemorrhage and if the injection is made too anterior it can cause chemoisis and ballooning of the conjunctiva. The steps of the sub tenon’s injection are shown in the video below(1):

A major decision step when converting to ECCE is to either extend the existing wound or close and make another. The ECCE will require a large incision of from 9-12 mm which is closed with suture. The decision to extend the existing wound or make a new wound hinges on several factors: location of the original wound, size of the brow, past surgical history, and possible need for future surgery.

Making a new incision during conversion is identical to that for a planned ECCE. The original incision is closed with a 10-O nylon suture. The surgeon and microscope are rotated as the surgeon should sit superior. The steps to make a new superior incision are:
  • Conjunctival peritomy of about 170 degrees
  • Use 64 or crescent blade to make limbal groove with a chord length of 11mm
  • Bipolar cautery for hemostasis
  • Use keratome to make initial incision starting in groove into AC
  • Extend initial incision to full length of groove (with scissors or knife)
  • Safety sutures are preplaced usually 7-O vicryl
Extending an existing incision can be tricky and the technique is different for scleral tunnels compared to clear corneal incisions. However in both cases the original extension is brought to the limbus. In the case of an original scleral incision the incision is brought anterior to join the limbus on either end before extending along the limbus for a chordlength of about 11mm. In the case of an existing corneal incision the corneal incision is brought posterior toward the limbus before extending the wound along the limbus for a chord length of about 11mm. When iris hooks are being used in a diamond configuration the wound can be extended to preserve the sub-incisional hook and the large pupil(2). The steps include:
  • Conjunctival peritomy of about 170 degrees,
  • Use 64 or crescent blade on either side of the existing wound to make a limbal groove with a chord length of 11mm
  • Bipolar cautery for hemostasis
  • Use Crescent to bring existing scleral wound anterior or existing corneal wound posterior to join limbus
  • Extend initial incision to full length of groove (with scissors or knife)
  • Safety sutures are preplaced usually 7-O vicryl.

One has to be far more careful when removing the nucleus during the typical conversion to ECCE which comes along with vitreous loss. First the anterior capsule must be large enough to allow the nucleus to express which may require relaxing incisions in some cases. When the zonules are weak or the posterior capsule is torn the lens cannot be expressed with fluid or external pressure as is often done with a planned ECCE with intact capsule/zonlules. After any vitreous is removed, the lens must be carefully looped out of the anterior chamber with minimal pressure on the globe. If the posterior capsule and zonlues are in tact than the lens can be expressed as described with a planned ECCE.

Placement of the IOL IOL selection with ECCE conversion depends on the residual capsular complex(3,4). The key to IOL centration is to get both of the haptics in the same place: either both in the bag or both in the sulcus.

When the posterior capsule is intact following a conversion to ECCE the anterior capsular opening is usually poorly defined which can make bag placement difficult. If the anterior capsule and thus the bag is well defined, then place a single piece acrylic IOL without folding it directly and gently into the bag using kelman forceps.

When the posterior capsule is intact and the anterior capsule is poorly defined then place a 3 piece IOL in the sulcus such as a large silicone IOL or the MA50 acrylic by placing these directly and unfolded into the sulcus with kelman forceps. Make sure that both haptics are in the sulcus.

When the posterior capsule is damaged, if enough anterior capsule and posterior capsule is left to support the IOL, define the sulcus with viscoat and place the IOL directly in the sulcus. Make sure both haptics are in the sulcus. If the IOL does not seem stable then place McCannel sutures to secure the IOL to the iris or remove and replace with an AC IOL (don’t forget to place a PI with vitrector).

When the capsule is severly damaged and cannot support an IOL then place the IOL in the anterior chamber. Use kelman forceps to place the IOL, then secure the chamber, and use a sinsky hook to place the AC IOL into its final position. (don’t forget to place a PI with vitrector).

Postoperative care for patients following conversion from phaco to ECCE is a bit more complicated and focuses on preventing cyctoid macular edema and limiting induced astigmatism. Often the care is very similar to that of a planned ECCE with about 3 post operative visits one the same day or next, one a week later, and one about 5-6 weeks later. Depending on the amount of astigmatism the patient may require several visits to sequentially remove sutures to eliminate induced astigmatism.

References

1. Oetting, TA, Cataract Surgery for Greenhorns, Available at http://medrounds.org/cataract-surgery-greenhorns.%20accessed%20September%209, 2007
2. Dupps WJ Oetting TA, Diamond iris retractor configuration for small-pupil extracapsular or intracapsular cataract surgery. J Cataract Refract Surg Vol 30(12):2473-2475
3. Chang DF, Oetting TA, Kim T, Curbside Consultations in Anterior Segment Surgery, Slack Inc, Thorofare NJ, 2007
4. Henderson BA, Essentials of Cataract Surgery, Slack Inc, Thorofare NJ, 2007

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