A Sudden Total Loss Of Vision After Routine Cataract Surgery
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Ghana medical journal
Abstract
We share our experience of a 50-year-old controlled
hypertensive woman who had routine cataract surgery
in her left eye. She was given retrobulbar Xylocaine
with adrenalin and postoperative gentamycin .She subsequently
became blind in the operated eye after developing
macular infarction by the first day post operative
and optic atrophy by 2 months postoperative. This
could have been caused by vascular occlusion in an
already compromised artherosclerosed vessels. It could
also have been due to gentamyin toxicity. Gentamycin
injection given subconjunctivally is known to rarely
result in severe retinal toxicity. This case illustrates that
even though cataract surgery is considerd a simple routine
procedure, and is performed in high volumes, it is
not without its blinding complications. We recommend
that the use of adrenaline in xylocaine should be used
with caution in hypertensive patients and also the routine
use of subconjunctival gentamycin injection after
cataract surgery should be reviewed and other modes
of endophthalmitis prophylaxis be considered.
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