Abstract
The clinical features of 100 consecutive cases and the histopathology of six enucleated eyes, all having undergone silicone oil injection for complicated retinal detachments, were studied with regard to the incidence and mechanisms of postoperative intraocular pressure changes. Preoperatively, five patients had glaucoma and 35 had hypotony (7 mm Hg or less). Immediately after surgery, 43 patients had glaucoma and 14 had hypotony, while seven had glaucoma and 39 had hypotony in the late postoperative period (average follow-up of 1 year). In most cases, the mechanism of intraocular pressure change did not appear to be directly related to the presence of silicone, but rather to the preoperative status of the eye and other aspects of the vitreoretinal surgery. When silicone was a factor, the resulting intraocular pressure appeared to represent a balance between mechanisms obstructing aqueous outflow (pupillary block and the reaction to silicone bubbles in the anterior chamber angle) and mechanisms reducing aqueous production (cyclitic membranes and retinal detachment).
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