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Original Research

Scleral Fixation of Intraocular Lens in Aphakic Eyes without Capsular Support: Description of a New Technique

ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 4689-4696 | Published online: 16 Dec 2021
 

Abstract

Purpose

To study the efficacy and safety of a modified trans-scleral intraocular lens (IOL) fixation technique in aphakic eyes when performed by ophthalmologists in training.

Methods

The study was conducted in an institutional setting that included 43 surgeries performed by surgeons training in small incision cataract surgeries. The data were analyzed for stability and position of IOL, refractive changes, best-corrected vision, and associated complications.

Results

Mean age of the subjects was 53.8 ± 18.5yrs (range 6–81yrs). Surgical aphakia (58.14%) was the most common cause. The corrected distance visual acuity improved significantly at six weeks (p = 0.0003). The mean residual spectacle correction was +0.74 ± 1.2D spherical equivalent (cylinder −1.6±1.5D at 84 ± 50°) at the 6th-month follow-up (24.35 ± 6.71wks). Lens tilt on ultrasound biomicroscopy (kappa 0.762; p < 0.001) and the IOL centration (kappa 0.411; p = 0.001), assessed by two independent masked observers, were satisfactory at the 6th-month visit. Transient postoperative vitreous hemorrhage was the most common complication (46.5%). Cellular deposits on the IOL surface (18.6%), cystoid macular edema (11.6%), subconjunctival haptic exposure (4.66%), and haptic slippage (2.33%) were the other complications.

Conclusion

This method of trans-scleral IOL fixation is an effective rescue procedure for eyes with deficient capsular support when ophthalmologists perform in training.

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.

Additional information

Funding

Hyderabad Eye Research Foundation.