Purpose: To estimate the incidence of vertical diplopia following peribulbar anesthesia in otherwise uncomplicated cataract surgery and to establish whether the use of hyaluronidase in the peribulbar injection mixture affected the likelihood of this complication.
Methods: Nine hundred forty consecutive phacoemulsification procedures using peribulbar anesthesia were retrospectively reviewed to identify cases of postoperative vertical diplopia. Case notes were reviewed to establish the nature and timing of the onset of diplopia, the anesthetic technique, and whether hyaluronidase was used. The patterns of progression as demonstrated by serial Hess charts were compared.
Results: There were 6 cases of vertical diplopia (incidence, 0.64%). All showed an immediate postoperative hypertropia in the injected eye changing during a 4- to 6-week period to hypotropia with restriction of upgaze. All applications of anesthesia were administered by consultant anesthetists, associate specialists, or residents under their direct supervision using 25-mm, 25-gauge needles with 2% lidocaine. Hyaluronidase was included in the injection mixture for 435 (46%) of the cases and was not included for 505 (54%) of the cases. All 6 cases of vertical diplopia occurred in the group in which hyaluronidase was not used, which has a significant association (chi-square test, 5.22; P = .023).
Conclusion: Hyaluronidase should be included in peribulbar anesthetics to reduce the risk of postoperative vertical diplopia.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/0191-3913-20040101-07 | DOI Listing |
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