• Anesthesiology · Nov 2022

    Perioperative Care of the Patient with Eye Pathologies Undergoing Nonocular Surgery.

    • Steven Roth, Heather E Moss, Thasarat Sutabutr Vajaranant, and BobbieJean Sweitzer.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois.
    • Anesthesiology. 2022 Nov 1; 137 (5): 620643620-643.

    AbstractThe authors reviewed perioperative ocular complications and implications of ocular diseases during nonocular surgeries. Exposure keratopathy, the most common perioperative eye injury, is preventable. Ischemic optic neuropathy, the leading cause of perioperative blindness, has well-defined risk factors. The incidence of ischemic optic neuropathy after spine fusion, but not cardiac surgery, has been decreasing. Central retinal artery occlusion during spine fusion surgery can be prevented by protecting eyes from compression. Perioperative acute angle closure glaucoma is a vision-threatening emergency that can be successfully treated by rapid reduction of elevated intraocular pressure. Differential diagnoses of visual dysfunction in the perioperative period and treatments are detailed. Although glaucoma is increasingly prevalent and often questions arise concerning perioperative anesthetic management, evidence-based recommendations to guide safe anesthesia care in patients with glaucoma are currently lacking. Patients with low vision present challenges to the anesthesia provider that are becoming more common as the population ages.Copyright © 2022, the American Society of Anesthesiologists. All Rights Reserved.

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