Abstract

Intraocular gas bubbles are an important source of internal tamponade for the treatment of retinal breaks in eyes requiring vitrectomy. The kinetics of disappearance of air, 20% sulfur hexafluoride, and 10% perfluoropropane were prospectively evaluated in 76 eyes undergoing pars plana vitrectomy. The absorption of each gas approximated a first-order kinetic equation with respect to bubble volume. The half-life of air was 1.6 days in phakic and 0.9 days in aphakic eyes. The half-life of 20% sulfur hexafluoride was 2.8 days in phakic and 2.4 days in aphakic eyes. The half-life of 10% perfluoropropane was 5.7 days in phakic, 4.5 days in aphakic, and 4.3 days in pseudophakic eyes. The difference in half-life among the three gases was significant. Intraocular gases had a shorter half-life in aphakic than in phakic eyes.

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