Abstract

Rhegmatogenous retinal detachment repair by intraoperative sealing of the tear without a tamponade agent should enable faster restoration of vision and resumption of normal activities. It avoids the need for further surgery in the case of silicone oil endotamponade. This study evaluated the retinal thermofusion (RTF) retinopexy method of subretinal space dehydration before photocoagulation to create an instantaneous intraoperative retina reattachment in a preclinical model. Preclinical study. Twenty Dutch Belt, pigmented rabbits that underwent RTF repair after experimental retinal detachment. This exvivo model quantified adhesion force between the retina and underlying retinal pigment epithelium and choroid after treatment of 1 retinal edge using postmortem porcine or human retina (6× 12 mm). We compared (1) control, (2) laser photocoagulation alone, (3) dehydration alone, and (4) dehydration followed by photocoagulation (RTF). Optimized parameters for RTF were then applied in the invivo rabbit model of retinal detachment. Animals were followed up for 14 days. For this exvivo model, we measured adhesion force and related this to tissue temperature. For the invivo study, we assessed retinal attachment using funduscopy and histologic analysis. The exvivo model showed that RTF repair produced significantly higher adhesion force than photocoagulation alone independent of dehydration method: warm (60° C) high airflow (50-70 ml/minute) or using laser wavelengths targeting water absorption peaks (1470 or 1940 nm) with coaxial low airflow (10-20 ml/minute). The latter approach produced a smaller footprint of dehydration. Application of RTF (1940-nm laser with coaxial airflow) in an invivo retinal detachment model in rabbit eyes resulted in immediate retinal adhesion, achieving forces similar to those in the exvivo experiments. Retinal thermofusion repair resulted in stable reattachment of the retina over the 2-week follow-up period. We showed that a short preliminary dehydrating laser treatment of a retinal tear margin before traditional laser photocoagulation creates an immediate intraoperative waterproof retinopexy adhesion independent of tamponade and a wound-healing response. This approach potentially will allow rapid postoperative recovery regardless of the tear location and improved vision.

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