Lecture 14 RGP complications Flashcards
What are the underlying causes of RGP complications?
hypoxia
drying
mechanical
toxic/hypersensitvity
What are the signs of hypoxia?
*Oedema
-spectacle blur
-striae/folds
-corneal steepening/corneal warpage
*Polymegethism
*Neovascularisation
What can cause corneal oedema?
What are the signs?
*Happens with PMMA and low Dk lenses
*Tight fitting which restricted tear exchange.
*Stroma likely to be affected
*Corneal oedema causes irregularity of cornea which causes light scatter
*May cause corneal clouding
*Shape of cornea will change due to oedema. -Can get corneal steepening associated with myopic shift.
How does corneal oedema occur?
*If we have a tight-fitting lens, there is no oxygen permeability
*This creates a hypoxic environment
*Epithelium begins to respire anaerobically to conserve energy
*Lactic acid is created
*Lactate concentration in epithelium increases and it moves into the stroma
*Creates osmotic effect. Promotes transfer of water from less concentration to high concentration.
*Cornea starts to gain more water
*Endothelial pump cannot remove water from stroma at the same rate it is entering the stroma
What are the signs of corneal oedema in order of increasing oedema?
Striae
*Fine, wispy, vertical lines
*In posterior stroma
*Striae increase as oedema increases
*Fluid separation of collagen fibres
Folds
*Depressed grooves, raised ridges
*Physical buckling of posterior stroma in response to oedema
Haze
*Stroma hazy, milky appearance
*Gross separation of collagen fibres throughout stroma
What causes endothelial polymegathism?
What is this?
What is the consequence?
*Long-term hypoxia
*Structural damage to endothelial cells
*Change to shape/size of cells. Should be hexagonal
*Capacity for endothelium to remove water diminishes
*Specular reflection to examine cells
*Corneal exhaustion syndrome
*Cant repair this
*Can create problems for future surgery
Which type of lens is neovasc not common in?
If it does occur, what is it associated with?
RGP lenses as lens sits in mid peripheral cornea where you don’t get neovasc
Could be associated with poor (PMMA) lens fit, chronic irritation, poor tear exchange
What causes vascularised limbal keratitis?
What is it?
What are the signs?
What is the differential diagnosis?
*Chronic CL induced irritation
*Mainly mechanical gives inflammatory reaction
*Associated with inadequate lubrication and low edge lift
*Semi-opaque corneal nodule.
*Called pseudopterygium
- Approaches onto cornea.
*Close to lens edge
*3 and 9 o clock or 4 and 8 o clock staining
*Coalesced superficial staining
*Localised superficial and stromal
neovascularization
*Pterygium
What can cause 3 and 9 o clock staining?
What is the origin?
What is it associated with?
*Poor or incomplete blinking
*Poor tear film. Surface evaporates quickly (low TBUT)
*Large eye (wide palpebral aperture)
*RGP material
*Excessive edge clearance
*Edges to thick
*Total diameter too large
*Total diameter too small
-created through impression of lens edge
-nasal and temporal staining
-associated with dellen (small area of cornea that dry’s out, thins and is exposed)
What are the solutions for 3 and 9 o clock staining?
*Break from lens wear- (esp if moderate)
*Correct blinking (exercises)
*Change care regime, ocular lubricants
*Refit with different material
*Refit with a soft lens
*Refit with lid attachment design
*Different TD
*Different peripheral design
What mechanical complications can you get from RGP wear?
*Corneal shape changes
-corneal topography changes
-corneal warpage
-Fischer-Schweitzer pattern
*Lens binding
*Dimple staining
*Foreign body tracks
*Ptosis
*Contact lens associated palpebral changes (mechanical and allergic)
*Mechanical 3 and 9 o clock staining
What corneal topography changes can you get?
What are the symptoms?
what is it associated with?
*Change in contour of cornea
*Corneal oedema makes warpage of cornea more prevalent
*Px will experience distorted vision
*Associated with ill-fitting PMMA lenses
Contraindication for refractive surgery
What causes a fischer-schweitzer pattern?
Waht are the signs?
What is the management?
What is the differential diagnosis?
*Mechanical deformation caused by ill-fitting lens
*Polygonal mosaic
*Wrinkling of bowman’s membrane
*Stress indicator for cornea and poor fitting lens
*Can be localised or cover whole cornea
*Disappears on lens removal
*No long-term implications
epithelial wrinkling
What is epithelial wrinkling associated with?
what are the signs and symptoms?
*Associated with soft CL
*Small lines or furrows at any angle
*Very painful
*Vision affected
What causes lens binding?
What are the signs and symptoms?
What is the management?
*Immobile, decentred lens
*Eyelid pressure, indentation of cornea by lens edge
*Suction effect
*Superficial keratitis may be noted
*Px will have difficulty removing lens
*Indentation staining in removal
*Need to alter lens fit to increase mobility
*Cease wear temporarily
*Review k readings before fitting