Intraocular pressure monitoring during prone percutaneous nephrolithotomy, should we pay attention?

Authors

  • Elias Sharma Asst. Professor, Department of Urology Government Medical College,Jammu
  • Jaideep Ratkal Associate Professor Dept of Urology Karnataka Institute of Medical Science, Hubli

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7439/ijbr.v8i10.4424

Abstract

Aims and objectives: Transitory post-operative visual loss in one of our patients following Percutaneus Nephrolithotomy (PCNL), led us to do a review the available literature on Post Operative Visual Loss (POVL) and to study the intraocular pressure (IOP) changes during prone PCNL. Introduction: POVL is a devastating complication in the setting of a non-ophthalmic surgery and can lead to severe legal consequences for the operating surgeon. Raised IOP leading to Ischaemic Optic Nerve Atrophy (ION) is one of the purported factor for POVL. Method: We serially measured IOP with a hand-held tonometer in 40 of our patients undergoing PCNL in prone position, at five-time point settings-Baseline; 10 minutes after anaesthesia (Supine 1); 10 minutes after putting the patient in prone position (Prone 1); At the end of the procedure (Prone 2); Before reversal of anaesthesia (Supine 2). Data analysis was done by repeated measures ANOVA and paired t tests using NCSS software. Results: Out of 40 patients 34(85%) were Males and 6 females (15%); with mean age of 46 years. The duration during which the patient was prone varied was 108.85 24.12 minutes. Measured IOP changed significantly in different positions, being highest in Prone 2 position. The rise in IOP had a linear relationship with the duration during which the patient was prone, reducing after anaesthesia reversal in supine position. Conclusions: Observing the safety measures in PCNL can go a long way in avoiding POVL, especially in those patients with large and complex stones necessitating the patient to be in prone position for longer durations.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

. Shen Y, Drum M, Roth S. Prevalence of perioperative visual loss in the United States, a 10 year study from 1996 to 2005 of spinal,orthopaedic,cardiac and general surgery. Anvisesth Analg; 2009; 109: 1534-1545.

. Abraham M, Sakhuja N, Sinha S, Rastogi S. Unilateral visual loss after cervical spine surgery, J Neurosurg Anesthesiol 2003;15:319-322.

. Lee L, Lam A. Unilateral blindness after prone lumbar spine surgery. Anesthesiology, 2001; 95: 793-795.

. Hayreh SS. Anterior ischaemic optic neuropath. Clin Neurosci 1997; 4: 251-263.

. LAM AK, DouthwaiteWA Does the change of anterior chamber depth or /and episcleral venous pressure cause intraocular pressure change in postural variation? Optom Vis Sci 1997; 74: 664-667.

. Murphy DF. Anaesthesia and intraocular pressure. Anesth Analg 1985; 64: 520-30.

. Hoh H, Schwanengel M Continuous intraocular pressure measurement over several days with the Codman microsensor, A case report. Klin M Onatsbi Augenheilkd 1999; 215: 186-96.

. Setogawa A, Kawai Y. Measurement of intraocular pressure by both invasive and non-invasive techniques in rabbits exposed to head down tilt. Japan J Physiol 1998; 48: 25-31.

. Draeger J, Michelsen G, Rumberger E Continuous assessment of intraocular pressure-telematic transmission even under flight or space mission conditions. Eur J Med Res 2000; 5: 2-4.

. Mehemet Ozcan, Praeltel C, Bhatti T, The effect of body inclination during prone positioning on intraocular pressure in awake volunteers: A comparison of two tables. Anesth Analg 2004; 99: 1152-8.

. Cheng MA, Todorov A, Tempelhoff R. The effect of prone positioning on intraocular pressure in anesthetized patients. Anesthesiology 2001; 5: 1351-55.

. Deniz Nuri, Erakgun A, Sertoz N. The effect of head rotation on intraocular pressure in prone position: a randomized trial. Rev Bras Anestesiol 2013; 63(2): 209-212.

. Cheng MA, Sigurdson W, Tempelhoff R Visual loss after spine surgery: a survey. Neurosurgery 2000; 46: 625-30.

. Friberg TR, Sanborn G, Weinreb RN. Intraocular and episcleral venous pressure increase during inverted posture. Am J Ophthalmol 1987; 103: 523-6.

. Smith TJ, Lewis J. Effect of inverted body position on intraocular pressure. Am J Opthalmol 1985; 99: 617-8.

. Kiel JW. Choroidal myogenic autoregulation and intraocular pressure. Exp Eye Res 1994; 58: 529-43.

. Hayreh SS Blood flow in optic nerve head and factors that may influence it. Prog Retin Eye Res 2001; 20: 595-624.

Downloads

Published

2017-10-30

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles

How to Cite

1.
Intraocular pressure monitoring during prone percutaneous nephrolithotomy, should we pay attention?. Int Jour of Biomed Res [Internet]. 2017 Oct. 30 [cited 2026 Mar. 17];8(10):572-5. Available from: https://www.ssjournals.co.in/index.php/ijbr/article/view/4424