Abstract

To compare the anatomical results of scleral buckling with and without retinopexy and to assess the effect of retinopexy on the scleral buckling outcome. This randomized clinical trial was performed on 55 patients. Twenty-two eyes were treated with scleral buckling (segmental or encircling) with or without drainage of subretinal fluid without any type of retinopexy (group 1); 33 patients received transscleral retinal cryopexy around retinal break(s) in addition to the former procedure. The two groups were matched regarding age, sex, myopia, aphakia, stage of proliferative vitroretinopathy (PVR) and number, type and location of the break(s). In the non-retinopexy group, 19 patients (86%) had complete retinal reattachment and one patient had partial reattachment after 34-48 months of follow-up. One patient did not develop attachment because of missed break out of the buckle, and one had no attachment at all because of PVR. Overall success rate was 91% (20 of 22) in this group. In the retinal cryopexy group, 26 patients (79%) had complete retinal reattachment and two had partial reattachment during 35-56 months of follow-up. In two patients, no attachment was achieved because of missed break out of the buckle; three patients developed redetachment after 1 and 3 months because of PVR. Overall success rate was 85% (28 of 33). The anatomical results in these two groups were the same statistically. With the permanent scleral buckling technique, retinal cryopexy adds no benefit to the success rate of anatomical retinal reattachment.

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