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WGA Rescources

Top-Ten of the Annual Scientific Meeting of the Pan Arab African Glaucoma Society:
Management of Glaucoma in Infancy and Childhood

November 19, 2005, Beirut, Lebanon

Karim Tomey

The Pan Arab (African) Glaucoma Society [PA(A)GS] held its first annual scientific meeting, in collaboration with the Department of Ophthalmology at the American University of Beirut.

  • The treatment of glaucoma in infancy and childhood is primarily surgical, yet medical therapy may be necessary in some situations: for example, in preparation for surgery and in cases where repeated surgical procedures keep failing and there is no more room for additional surgery.
  • Beta-blockers have been associated with apnea, and alpha-2 agonists with significant (even fatal) central nervous system depression in infants. Such medications must be used with extreme caution, or avoided altogether in the very young age groups.
  • Topical carbonic anhydrase inhibitors have been shown to be safe and effective in children. Prostaglandin analogues are also supposed to be safe, but their long-term efficacy is yet to be determined.
  • Goniotomy and trabeculotomy yield the best results in cases with isolated trabeculodysgenesis that present after birth but before two years of age. The two procedures seem to have comparable success rates, but must be performed only by the experienced glaucoma surgeon or pediatric ophthalmologist. Performing safe goniotomy requires excellent visibility of the angle, and hence a very clear cornea. Safety of this procedure is also greatly enhanced by filling the anterior chamber with viscoelastic. Trabeculotomy, on the other hand, can be performed on eyes with hazy corneas.
  • Trabeculectomy is another viable option in infants and children. However, special precautions are necessary in stretched globes, where the limbal anatomy can be greatly distorted. Anterior chamber entry under the scleral flap needs to be as central (corneal) as possible, otherwise the risk of injuring the ciliary body, iris root, or even the vitreous base becomes high. The combination of trabeculectomy with trabeculotomy in selected cases (usually older children) is said to have a higher success rate than either procedure done alone. Adjunctive antifibrotic agents, especially mitomycin-C, are probably indicated in most, if not all, cases, because of the strong healing reaction of young tissues. However, unless such agents are used judiciously, the risks of hypotony and of bleb-related infections have been reported to increase significantly in the young age groups (as they do also in adults).
  • Non-penetrating glaucoma procedures may offer a safer alternative in children, insofar as they may as effective as trabeculectomy in achieving pressure control, but without the dreaded complications of chamber shallowing, leaks, infections, etc. Such delicate procedures may be technically more demanding in stretched globes with thin scleras, as the case is in many congenital glaucoma eyes, and besides, their long-term efficacy is yet to be determined.
  • Glaucoma drainage devices are indicated in cases where multiple conventional procedures fail. Tube-cornea touch and erosion of the device through the conjunctiva are two common problems that are quite likely to occur over the long lifespan of the child (eye rubbing; trauma). The failure rates of such devices in the young age groups are probably also higher than in adults.
  • Cyclodestruction is generally the last resort after all the other incisional procedures fail, and is usually reserved for eyes with poor visual potential. Although diode laser cyclophotocoagulation seems to be more promising than cyclocryotherapy, both modalities are less effective in the young age groups, and hence multiple treatment sessions are often required. Complications rates are rather high, the most serious being hypotony, visual loss, and phthisis.
  • Up to 40% of infants undergoing uncomplicated cataract extraction can develop secondary glaucoma, even decades after surgery, and for no visible reason. The performance of cataract surgery below the age of nine months and leaving the eye aphakic have been shown to be two significant factors that increase the risk of secondary glaucoma. Of course, a poor surgical technique and/or the occurrence of intraoperative complications are other risk factors.
  • Controlling the intraocular pressure of an infant's eye does not necessarily restore its function. There is still the important issue of amblyopia management. Refractive errors and media opacities are the two most important factors leading to amblyopia. Corrective spectacles or contact lenses with occlusion therapy usually take care of anisometropic amblyopia. With the constant refinement in cataract surgical techniques and improvement in intraocular lens (IOL) designs and materials, IOL's are being implanted more and more liberally in the younger age groups, which has made tackling the problem of aphakia in children much easier. Addressing corneal opacification is still a major challenge, as there are still lots of problems associated with penetrating keratoplasty in the very young.

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