Abstract

AimTo report the long-term outcome of the management of a series of culture proven post pars plana vitrectomy endophthalmitis in which the infective agent was in the silicone oil used as an endotamponade. The isolates were Burkholderia cepacia and Pseudomonas aeruginosa.MethodA retrospective interventional reporting of a series consisting of a cluster of five cases.CasesFive consecutive patients received the same batch of 5000-centistoke silicone oil as endotamponade at the conclusion of vitreoretinal surgery and presented with features of acute intraocular inflammation, which was due to an infective cause. The infective organism isolated from the mixture of silicone oil and fluid was B. cepacia in three out of the initial cluster of four eyes and P. aeruginosa in the fifth eye.Outcome of managementThe initial 4 eyes evolved into eyes with poor vision (hand motion, perception of light and no perception of light), advanced proliferative vitreoretinopathy, hypotony, phthisis bulbi and cornea opacity. The poor visual outcome was deemed to be consequent to delay in removal of the silicone oil, despite use of intravitreal, systemic and topical antibiotics. The fifth case, because of the heightened index of suspicion gained from the preceding four cases, had a prompt removal of the silicone oil, vitreal lavage with antibiotics, and intravitreal injection of antibiotics and steroid. He regained a 6/9 vision.ConclusionGram-negative bacilli can colonize silicone oil resulting in post pars plana vitrectomy endophthalmitis. The index of suspicion for this should be high and can be managed successfully with prompt removal of the silicone oil, microbial sensitive antibiotic lavage of the vitreous cavity, followed by a repeat tamponade.

Highlights

  • Silicone oil has had an important use as a long-acting endotamponade agent in vitreoretinal surgery for several decades [1]

  • Gram-negative bacilli can colonize silicone oil resulting in post pars plana vitrectomy endophthalmitis

  • We present the clinical course and treatment outcome in a series of five eyes in five consecutive patients who developed post pars plana vitrectomy endophthalmitis secondary to culture proven gram-negative bacilli

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Summary

Conclusion

Gram-negative bacilli can colonize silicone oil resulting in post pars plana vitrectomy endophthalmitis.

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