Spine Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Table Position on Intraocular Pressure (IOP) and Ocular Perfusion Pressure (OPP) During Prone Spine Surgery
Postoperative visual loss resulting from surgical procedures not performed on the eye is a devastating outcome for the patient and poorly understood by the medical community. It is potentially a preventable complication. Diminished blood supply to the optic nerve, affecting both the anterior or posterior portions of the optic nerve, is the most common cause of postoperative visual loss. Other, less common causes include occlusion of the retinal artery and vein, a retinal embolism and cortical blindness. The incidence of postoperative visual loss increases in patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass and prone spinal surgery. Although the etiology of postoperative visual loss is unknown, it is thought to be multifactorial, and several potential risk factors have been identified, including degree of low blood pressure, preoperative hematocrit, external compression of the eye, amount of blood loss, prolonged duration of surgical time and lying in the face down position. The investigators believe this study is a unique opportunity to examine the mechanisms responsible for the antecedents to postoperative visual loss (POVL) and ischemic optic neuropathy (ION), a devastating complication of (usually) an elective surgical procedure. The purpose of this research is to try and determine the potential variables responsible for postoperative visual loss which will assist the medical community in devising methods for its prevention.
Postoperative permanent visual loss is a rare but devastating complication of surgery
estimated to occur after approximately 1/60,000 anesthetics. After procedures involving
cardiopulmonary bypass and prone spinal surgery, the estimates are higher, 1/1600 to 1/1100,
respectively and have led to the formation in July of 1999 of the Postoperative Visual Loss
(POVL) Registry under the auspices of the American Society of Anesthesia (ASA) Committee on
Professional Liability. The majority of reported cases as of early 2003 were associated with
spine surgery (67%).
Of the spine cases, the majority were due to ischemic optic neuropathy (ION) (81%) followed
by central retinal artery occlusion (13%) and unknown diagnosis (6%). Central retinal artery
occlusion is characterized by periorbital edema, a cherry red spot at the fovea and
monocular blindness. It is thought to be due to direct prolonged extraocular pressure on the
globe and thus is preventable. Direct pressure on the eye is the etiology most often
mentioned by spine surgeons in an attempt to explain all forms of postoperative visual loss.
Post anesthetic ION, affecting both the anterior and posterior portions of the optic nerve,
however, is the more common diagnosis. The etiology is unclear but hypo perfusion of the
optic nerve has been associated with multiple risk factors. The four patient factors are
obesity, hypertension, diabetes and low preoperative hematocrit. There are five surgical
factors, which include an operation of long duration, large blood loss, prone position,
deliberate hypotension, and blood replacement strategies which increase the tissue fluid
compartment while decreasing the hematocrit. ION occurs in patients who had their heads
suspended in Mayfield tongs (18% of ION cases), virtually eliminating any source of external
pressure. In addition, 58% of these patients had bilateral disease, making direct pressure
less likely.
Thus, most POVL cases appear to be directly related to a change in retinal and/or optic
nerve perfusion. The visual loss associated with anterior ION is caused by infarction in the
watershed zones between the areas supplied by the posterior ciliary arteries, which are end
arteries without anastomosis. Posterior optic neuropathy is thought to be caused by
decreased oxygen delivery to the posterior portion of the optic nerve between the orbital
apex and the entrance of the central retinal artery.
Critical to any discussion of perfusion to the eye is the concept of ocular perfusion
pressure (OPP), defined as the difference between the mean arterial pressure (MAP) and the
intraocular pressure (IOP). Unopposed decreases in MAP, increases in IOP or a combination of
the two may result in hypo perfusion of the eye and can cause an ocular infarction at the
level of the retina or optic nerve, leading to varying degrees of visual loss which is
frequently bilateral and irreversible.
Animal data indicate that IOP increases with downward head tilting in the supine position,
possibly due to increased episcleral venous pressure. Limited data for awake human
volunteers indicate that IOP increases with supine positioning and is further elevated with
head down tilting and prone positioning again possibly due to a rise in episcleral venous
pressure.
This is a randomized prospective study examining the effect of the table position on
intraocular pressure and ocular perfusion pressure during spine surgery.
Subjects will be recruited following the preoperative visit to the Neurosurgical office. An
informed consent will be obtained after the consent for surgery is signed. A visual acuity
exam will be performed with one of the study team members with the subject wearing
corrective lenses on the morning of the surgery. The reactivity of the pupil will also be
assessed via a penlight.
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