Intraocular
pressure spike after YAG iridotomy in patients with pigment dispersion
C.M. Birt ABSTRACT
Background:
The role of laser peripheral iridotomy
to break a suspected reverse pupil block in the long-term control of
pigment dispersion is promising, but the usefulness of this procedure
has not been completely established. The author examined whether patients
with pigment dispersion are at higher risk for an intraocular pressure
(IOP) spike after laser peripheral iridotomy due to possible compromise
of trabecular meshwork function, compared with patients undergoing prophylactic
peripheral iridotomy for an occludable angle.
Methods:
Data were collected prospectively on the
first eye of 87 patients with occludable angles and 13 patients with
pigment dispersion treated with peripheral laser iridotomy between November
1995 and October 1996 at the glaucoma service of a university-affiliated
hospital in Toronto. All patients received one drop of 0.5% apraclonidine
before the procedure. IOP was measured before and 1 and 24 hours after
the procedure.
Results:
There was no difference between the two
groups in the distribution of right vs. left eyes, sex, race, the mean
total energy required to produce a patent iridotomy, the mean number
of medications used or the mean IOP before the procedure. The patients
with pigment dispersion were significantly younger than those with occludable
angles (mean age [and standard deviation (SD)] 40.5 [9.45] years vs.
66.4 [10.78] years) (p < 0.001).There was no difference between the
two groups in mean IOP at 1 hour or at 24 hours.Twenty-nine patients
(33%) in the occludable angle group and seven (54%) in the pigment dispersion
group had an IOP spike greater than 2 mm Hg after the procedure (p =
0.001). Among these patients, the mean IOP (36.4 [SD 10.83] mm Hg vs.
30.3 [SD 7.04] mm Hg, p = 0.05) and the mean rise in IOP (14.0 [SD 10.63]
mm Hg vs. 8.7 [SD 4.73] mm Hg, p = 0.04) were significantly higher in
those with pigment dispersion than in those with occludable angles.
Among the patients who used antiglaucoma medications before the procedure
or had a prelaser IOP level greater than 22 mm Hg, those with pigment
dispersion were more likely than those with occludable angles to have
an IOP spike at 1 hour (p ?0.005).
Interpretation:
Patients with pigment dispersion undergoing
iridotomy to break a reverse pupil block should be carefully assessed
after the procedure, as significant pressure spikes requiring treatment
may occur.
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