Klinische Monatsblätter für Augenheilkunde
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Klin Monbl Augenheilkd · Dec 1990
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial[Ocular circulatory changes caused by retrobulbar anesthesia with and without added adrenaline].
In 80 patients, retrobulbar anesthesia (RBA; 5 ml of a lidocaine-bupivacaine mixture with hyaluronidase) with or without addition of adrenaline (after-mixing concentration 1:500,000) was performed preoperatively. In 2 examination series, the acute and medium-term effects of RBA on the following ocular circulatory variables were investigated: ocular pulsation volume (PVoc), systolic ciliary and retinal perfusion pressures or blood pressures, respectively (method: oculo-oscillo-dynamography). ⋯ The lowering of PVoc--which variable is determined mainly by the pulsatile choroidal blood flow--in concert with the lowered ciliary perfusion and blood pressures is indicative of a reduced ciliary blood flow during RBA. Because of the decreased retinal perfusion and blood pressures, there is also a higher risk of reduced blood supply to the retina. Only to some degree, the observed inhibitory RBA effects on ocular circulation can be explained by adrenaline, and to an even smaller degree by the only transient Pio elevation.