Intraocular Pressure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Continuous Intraocular Pressure Patterns in Spine Surgery
Post-operative visual loss is a rare but serious complication after surgery. It is most
significantly correlated with prone spinal surgery with a prolonged duration. The cause and
risk factors are not elucidated, but the majority of the cases are due posterior ischaemic
optic neuropathy (PION). This entity is directly related to the ocular perfusion pressure
(OPP), which is estimated as the difference between mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and
intraocular pressure (IOP). Autoregulation is believed to maintain a constant perfusion to
the optic nerve despite fluctuations in the perfusion pressure.
IOP is known to increase in the prone position thus putting susceptible patients at risk for
inadequate ocular nerve perfusion. Most of the evidence comes from animal and healthy
volunteer studies and cannot give an accurate insight into the subtle changes of
intra-operative IOP. All the published studies employed the use of a tonometer, which may
have rooms for measurement errors due to inadvertent pressure on the globe while retracting
the eyelids, particularly when there is significant periorbital/conjunctival swelling in the
prone position. The majority of the studies recruited healthy volunteers in a simulated
surgical setting so other fluctuating parameters, which can affect intraoperative IOP, cannot
be measured. In the few reports where patients undergoing surgery in the prone position were
studies, IOP measurements were taken at non-continuous monitoring at time intervals, thus the
effects of changes in blood volume, MAP, central venous pressure (CVP) and PaCO 2 could not
be studied. Lastly, all the literature consists of case series only with no control group so
the effect of position cannot be evaluated independently of the other factors.
The investigators therefore propose to conduct a prospective study with continuous
intraoperative IOP monitoring to give us further insight into the physiological changes of
IOP in patients undergoing spine surgery, and identify the risk factors related to
fluctuations of IOP during prone spinal surgery.
Post-operative visual loss (POVL) is a rare but serious complication after surgery.
One of the known associations is prone spinal surgery with a prolonged duration.
The cause is not completely understood, but some of the risk factors for developing POVL
include anaemia, hypotension, the duration of surgery and patient factors such as age,
hypertension and atherosclerosis. There are also some unidentifiablerisk factors that may
predispose young healthy patients to POVL. Once the patient develops POVL, it is usually
irreversible, and the patient is left with a permanent disability.
The majority of POVL cases that occur with prone spinal surgery are due to posterior
ischaemic optic neuropathy (PION). PION is directly related to the ocular perfusion pressure
(OPP), which is estimated as the difference between mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and
intraocular pressure (IOP). Autoregulation is believed to maintain a constant perfusion to
the optic nerve despite fluctuations in the perfusion pressure.
However, there is a knowledge gap in the physiological changes of IOP during prone surgery.
IOP is a highly dynamic parameter, and the most widely used method to measure it is using a
handheld tonometer. The main limitation of this technique is the isolated nature of its
measurements, as it can only be taken at regular intervals, and may not reflect the full
range of IOP changes. Studies on IOP during prone position in the current literature have all
used this technique. 1-5 Hence subtle changes of IOP can be undetected, as interval
measurements cannot reflect short-term variations that occur within seconds or minutes.
Furthermore, most of the studies are performed on animals or healthy volunteers 5,6 , which
further limit the interpretation of their results. For the few studies performed on
anaesthetised patients undergoing spinal surgeries, the duration of surgery is short or
mixed, so the critical time point may not have been studied. The American Society of
Anesthesiologists Postoperative Visual Loss Registry suggests that an anaesthetic duration of
greater than 6 hours is more correlated with POVL.
Using state of the art technology Over the past five years, advances in technology have led
to the development of devices that allow 24 hour continuous IOP monitoring. The new system
makes use of microelectromechanical systems, nanotechnology, and telemetry to allow
continuous monitoring. A disposable contact lens sensor, first proposed by Leonardi et al. 8
, is now commercially available (SENSIMED Triggerfish; Sensimed AG, Lausanne, Switzerland).
This technology can acquire data points over a 24 hour period corresponding to 30 seconds of
continuous measurements. It measures changes in the ocular dimensions at the corneoscleral
junction, which corresponds to changes to IOP and volume. The microprocessor within the lens
transmits data to an external antenna, and the profiles can be stored in a portable recorder.
9 Although this sensor does not measure IOP directly, it gives measurements with a composite
of IOP and volume changes, and it is most valuable in documenting relative changes of
IOP-related events and their timing. It is also well tolerated in real life patients, and
have been used to document IOP changes in patients with glaucoma and thyroid eye disease.
9-11 This is the only non-invasive temporary continuous monitoring in the system that can be
used in human beings. This new technology is therefore ideal in detecting subtle changes in
IOP pattern in prone spinal surgery. It will provide a continuous monitoring which can be
correlated with the patient's level of anaesthesia, arterial pressure fluctuations and volume
status, and can contribute to improved understanding of IOP changes during prone spinal
surgery, which may in turn bridge the knowledge gap of the causes of POVL.
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