Abstract

Glaucoma filtration surgery can result in loss of visual acuity by a variety of mechanisms. The existence of "wipe-out" (loss of the central visual field in the absence of other explanation) as a cause of postoperative loss of visual acuity has been debated. This study defines the incidence and etiology of visual acuity loss within 3 months of trabeculectomy. The authors reviewed 508 eyes of 440 patients who underwent trabeculectomy to find cases of postoperative visual acuity loss (2 or more Snellen lines or a category change) and randomly selected a control group of 85 eyes to analyze the risk factors for each cause of visual acuity loss. Forty-two eyes (8.3%) showed loss of visual acuity after 3 months, caused mainly by lens opacification (n = 16), hypotony maculopathy (n = 6), and "wipe-out" (n = 4). Older patients (P = 0.0108), those in whom the visual field preoperatively showed macular splitting (P = 0.0084) and those who had severe hypotony (intraocular pressure [IOP] < or = 2 mmHg) on the first postoperative day (P = 0.0246) were more likely to experience "wipe-out." Older age (P = 0.0495) and shallow anterior chamber (P = 0.0003) were correlated to the development of lens opacification. Hypotony maculopathy was associated with coronary artery disease (P = 0.0397) and systemic hypertension (P = 0.0118). Lens opacification was the main cause of early visual acuity loss after trabeculectomy, followed by hypotony maculopathy. "Wipe-out," although rare, does exist, and older patients with advanced visual field defects are at increased risk.

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