ESCRS - FP20.15 - Evaluation Of Correction Of Aphakia In Children Using A Modified Technique For Retropupillary Iris Supported Iol

Evaluation Of Correction Of Aphakia In Children Using A Modified Technique For Retropupillary Iris Supported Iol

Published 2025 - 43rd Congress of the ESCRS

Reference: FP20.15 | Type: Free paper | DOI: 10.82333/z161-nz65

Authors: Sanjay Chaudhary* 1 , Neha Sandhu 1 , Hema Mehra 1 , Sonal Gupta 1

1ophthalmology,Eye7 hospitals ,New Delhi,India

Purpose

To assess the efficacy, stability and safety of correction of aphakia in children using a modified technique for retropupillary iris supported iol

Setting

The Memorial Institute For Ophthalmic Research (MIOR)

Methods

case series study of 20 eyes of 12 patients aged between 4-15 years. with follow up period ranges from 6 m -2years.

 The inclusion criteria were aphakia with insufficient capsular or zonular support, sufficient iris tissue , no history of uveitis.

Excluison Criteria : presence of capsularsupport , aniridia, sever iris atrophy or iris laceration that cannot be repaired

 

 

Surgical Technique : This modified technique depending on that while I am fixating the claw in the iris ,I perforate the iris with one side of the claw to keep one side of each claw anterior to the iris, this will be more safe especially for children that this will prevent the IOL from dropping in vitreous with trauma or with iris atrophy (shown in videos)

Results

study included  12 patients, age ranged from 4 to 15 y .

   11 eyes (55%)  inadequate capsular support after cat surgery , 6 eyes (30%)  congenital lens subluxation  ,3 eyes (15%)  traumatic lens subluxation.

 

 100% of eyes showed improvement in UCVA, BCVA, stable IOL in their places .

 

pre-operative:

UCVA ranged from 0.01 to 0.05.

 BCVA ranged from 0.4 to 0.7.

 IOP ranged from 7 to 32 mmHg .

sphere (+6.00 to +10.0)

 

 postoperative:

 UCVA ranged from 0.3 to 0.7 .

BCVA ranged from 0.5 to 0.9 .

IOP ranged from 9 to 35 mmHg.

 sphere (+1.00 to + 2.00).

 

 complications:

early postoperative period, three (15%) eyes showed mild corneal edema, two (10%) eyes had transient IOP elevation more than 20 mmHg and one (5%) eye had AC inflammatory reaction.

Conclusions

Retropupillary iris claw IOL is the best choice of correction of aphakia in children 

 This modification I did in the original technique will make the use of this IOL more safe  in children even if iris atrophy occured or trauma to the eye , the part of iol in front of the iris tissue will prevent iol from dropped in the viterous.