Case Reports in Ophthalmology (Jan 2017)

Surgical Management of a Patient with Anterior Megalophthalmos, Lens Subluxation, and a High Risk of Retinal Detachment

  • María Carmen Guixeres Esteve,
  • Augusto Octavio Pardo Saiz,
  • Lucía Martínez-Costa,
  • Samuel González-Ocampo Dorta,
  • Pedro Sanz Solana

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000456068
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 61 – 66

Abstract

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The early development of lens opacities and lens subluxation are the most common causes of vision loss in patients with anterior megalophthalmos (AM). Cataract surgery in such patients is challenging, however, because of anatomical abnormalities. Intraocular lens dislocation is the most common postoperative complication. Patients with AM also seem to be affected by a type of vitreoretinopathy that predisposes them to retinal detachment. We here present the case of a 36-year-old man with bilateral AM misdiagnosed as simple megalocornea. He had a history of amaurosis in the right eye due to retinal detachment. He presented with vision loss in the left eye due to lens subluxation. Following the removal of the subluxated lens, it was deemed necessary to perform a vitrectomy in order to prevent retinal detachment. Seven months after surgery, an Artisan® Aphakia iris-claw lens was implanted in the anterior chamber. Fifteen months of follow-up data are provided.

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