Abstract
Purpose:
To present contemporary information regarding the continued inability to reliably predict visual acuity following successful retinal reattachment surgery.
Methods:
Literature review.
Results:
Anatomical results of surgery for retinal detachment continue to be far superior to visual results. Clinical factors that have been considered important in predicting postoperative visual acuity include preoperative vision, duration of detachment, height of detachment, and preoperative potential acuity meter results. Recently, optical coherence tomography (OCT) studies have been employed for the purpose of predicting postoperative visual acuity, but to date none of these devices can precisely forecast postoperative vision in an individual eye.
Conclusions:
Preoperative visual acuities appear to be the most important clinical variants correlating with postoperative visual results. Although advanced OCT techniques have identified preoperative and postoperative anatomical alterations that correlate with preoperative and postoperative visions in groups of eyes, no single specific finding indicates unequivocal visual success, and most reports continue to include examples of exceptions to statistical trends.
INTRODUCTION
Rhegmatogenous retinal detachments (RRDs) were virtually irreparable until the classic work of Jules Gonin,1 who proved the cause of the disorder by creating a method of anatomical repair. Anatomical results from Lausanne and elsewhere rather quickly reached approximately 50% of operated cases, and this figure has continued to improve over the past 80 years. Nevertheless, there are very few data that indicate significant improvement in visual results, barring complications, and it appears that postoperative vision is usually predetermined by the status of macular function at the time of surgery.2
Clinical variables that have been considered important in predicting postoperative visual acuity following repair of macula-off retinal detachments include duration and/or height of macular detachment, preoperative vision measured routinely or with a type of potential visual acuity meter, age of the patient, and additional macular pathology. Nonclinical variables employed for the same purpose include laboratory measurements such as multifocal electroretinograms (ERGs), contrast sensitivities, and, more recently, optical coherence tomography (OCT).
The purpose of this report is to review the literature in an attempt to discover if an optimal method of predicting postoperative visual acuity following successful retinal reattachment surgery exists or if major inconsistencies in the apparent values of the variety of “predictors” remain a reality.
METHODS AND MATERIALS
A thorough literature review of MEDLINE was conducted to discover all apparent articles in the English language that discussed results of surgery for RRD, visual acuity outcomes, and potential preoperative predictors of postoperative vision. These were subdivided into “clinical variables” and “laboratory values,” and manuscripts that were considered to contain the most reliable data are discussed in this study.
Internal review board approval and care of animals were considered to be irrelevant.
RESULTS
Clinical variables were discussed more commonly in older articles, whereas newer manuscripts have emphasized discussions of laboratory predictors, particularly OCT.
CLINICAL VARIABLES
Clinical variables included duration and height of retinal detachment, preoperative visual acuities measured routinely or with a variety of additional devices, and additional macular pathology.
DURATION OF MACULAR DETACHMENT
The length of time that a macula is detached due to a RRD has long been considered important in predicting recovery of vision following successful surgery. However, the importance of the specific duration of macular detachment has been debated for decades. Many individuals have stated that every hour of detachment may be critical, whereas others have concluded that once a macula has detached, there is little difference in visual outcomes if the detachment is repaired within 7 days,3 10 days, 14 days, or even longer. Virtually all of these studies are flawed, with an essential element being the reality of the effect of preoperative vision and/or additional variables. Clearly, better visual acuity would be expected following repair of a shallow macular detachment of 2 months duration due to a retinal dialysis and with 20/40 visual acuity than would be predicted following cure of a detachment of 3 days duration and a visual acuity of hand motions.
HEIGHT OF MACULAR DETACHMENT
The amount of elevation of the detached macula has been considered as a critical variable in predicting postoperative visual acuity, particularly in cases of macular detachment of less than a week.4 However, extreme variations are observed; for instance, in one report,4 3 cases had macular detachments of 0.6, 2.0, and 4.9 mm in height and preoperative visual acuities of 20/400, hand movements, and counting fingers, respectively, and all were detached for 2 days. Postoperatively, visual acuities were 20/20, 20/20, and 20/40, respectively. However, a fourth case had a macular detachment of 1 day’s duration and a height of 0.7 mm. Preoperative vision of hand movements did not improve beyond this level.
PREOPERATIVE VISUAL ACUITY
Doyle and coworkers5 are among a large number of individuals who state that preoperative visual acuity is the most important clinical variable predicting recovery of postoperative vision. Although duration of detachment was also considered to be important, in a multivariate analysis preoperative vision was the only strongly predictive factor. Friberg and Eller6 reported a similar relationship when preoperative vision was measured with a potential acuity meter. Still, there are occasional uncomplicated cases in which relatively good preoperative vision does not improve following successful surgery.
LABORATORY VARIABLES
A variety of laboratory studies, including OCT, have been employed in an effort to discover preoperative predictors of postoperative visual success.
NON-OCT LABORATORY STUDIES
Ozgur and Esgin7 correlated duration of macular detachment with preoperative and postoperative visual acuity, visual evoked potential, color vision, contrast sensitivity, and visual fields. Although all of these indicators of macular function demonstrated trends to improve following successful surgery, there was significant scatter of the data. In another report,8 multifocal foveal ERG amplitudes were reduced preoperatively and returned to normal following surgery in spite of demonstrating no correlation with postoperative visual acuity.
OCT STUDIES
OCT devices have become invaluable in the assessment of macular disorders, and it has been hoped that they might provide insights into macular damage associated with RRD as well as causes of relatively poor postoperative vision. Residual subretinal fluid following clinical reattachment is much more common than previously suspected. In addition, undulations, intraretinal separations, intraretinal cysts, distortion of inner and outer photoreceptor segments, and other changes have been described. The newer high-speed spectral-domain, Fourier-domain, and custom OCT devices have greatly improved the resolution of these studies, and greater attention has been directed toward attenuation, alteration, and disruption of the junction line between photoreceptor inner and outer photoreceptor segments in particular. However, the correlation of these findings with postoperative vision remains inconsistent.
Residual Subretinal Fluid. In a prospective study, Cavallini and coworkers9 described residual subretinal fluid in two-thirds of cases 1 month following successful reattachment surgery. At the sixth postoperative month, subretinal fluid remained in a third of eyes, and poor visual acuity was associated with this finding. However, Seo and associates10 discovered no relationship between residual subretinal fluid and ultimate visual acuity, even though the former was present postoperatively in 52% at 1 month, 25% at 6 months, 17% at 9 months, and 0% at 12 months.
Intraretinal OCT Changes. A consistent difference between macular detachment due to RRD and to central serous chorioretinopathy (CSR) has been the presence of several OCT changes in only the former group, and it well recognized that both preresolution and postresolution visual acuities are traditionally lower in the former group. Still, a precise correlation between OCT changes and visual acuity is lacking.
Lee and coworkers11 matched 15 eyes with RRD and 15 with CSR and demonstrated no apparent structural changes in the latter group. However, in the RRD cases, preoperative retinal cysts were observed in 10, intraretinal separations in 9, and undulation of the outer retina in 6. In 4 cases all 3 of these findings were present; in 5 eyes 2 of the 3 changes were observed. Three cases had one change, and the remaining 3 had none. Postoperatively, 2 eyes exhibited intraretinal cysts, but no changes were observed in the remaining 13. There was a trend for preoperative and postoperative vision to be better in the cases with relatively few preoperative intraretinal changes, but some eyes with 2 or more changes had better postoperative visions than cases with only one or none.
Nakanishi and coworkers12 demonstrated similar findings with spectral-domain OCT but also discovered photoreceptor disruption in 40% of RRD cases. Postoperative vision correlated with preoperative vision, height of detachment, and photoreceptor disruption. However, 2 eyes with the latter preoperative changes achieved 20/25 and 20/20 postoperative visual acuity.
Retinal thickness and outer nuclear layer thickness were studied with high-speed OCT in a selected series of cases with RRD and CSR by Maruko and coworkers.13 The thickness of the outer nuclear layer was greater in the RRD group than the CSR group, but significant differences in retinal thickness were not observed. Although postoperative vision was stated to correlate significantly with outer nuclear layer thickness, there were several exceptions to this statistical premise.
Another recent study14 evaluated the maculas postoperatively in both macula-on and macula-off RRDs with Fourier-domain OCT. Foveal anatomical abnormalities were discovered in 62% of cases. Disruption of the photoreceptor inner segment/outer segment (IS/OS) junction line (61%) and the external limiting membrane (24%) was observed only in macula-off cases, whereas additional changes were noted in both types of detachments. This disruption was statistically related to relatively poor postoperative visual acuity. The investigators also noted in following some of the cases with a disrupted inner/outer photoreceptor line with or without disrupted external limiting membrane that restoration of a normal IS/OS line occurred only in eyes without an initially disrupted external limiting membrane. Eyes in which the IS/OS junction returned to normal exhibited better visual acuity than those in which this change did not occur. It should be noted that visual acuities in the 38% of cases without OCT abnormalities were not discussed in this report.
DISCUSSION
Visual acuity success continues to be less satisfactory than the anatomical outcomes of surgery for retinal detachment. The basic cause is clearly macular damage associated with the presence of subretinal fluid, although complications of surgery can be compounding factors.
A variety of clinical variables have been studied over the past decades in an effort to predict postoperative vision, but there are exceptions to virtually all correlations that have been studied to date, and it is difficult to avoid a conclusion that the health of the macula at the time of reattachment is the most critical variable, barring surgical complications. More recently, laboratory investigations have studied the function and anatomy of postoperative cases, and in particular high-speed OCT studies have demonstrated a variety of previously unrecognized interesting changes associated with diminished vision. Still, the reason that some eyes with similar alterations fare significantly better than others remains a genuine mystery. This is an active area of basic retinal research, and the attempt to limit the amount and severity of photoreceptor cell death will hopefully become increasingly fruitful in future years.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Funding/Support: None
Financial disclosures: None.
Conformity With Author Information: No IRB consent was deemed necessary.
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