Affiliation:
1. Department of Glaucoma, Hebei Eye Hospital, Hebei Provincial Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology, Hebei Provincial Clinical Research Center for Eye Diseases, Xingtai, Hebei Province, China.
Abstract
Rationale:
Phacolytic glaucoma (PLG), a secondary open-angle glaucoma caused by high molecular weight proteins leaking through the capsule of a hypermature cataract. Leakage of liquefied lens cortex behind the posterior capsule is rare. In this paper, we review a case of phacolytic glaucoma in the lens cortex behind posterior capsule.
Patient concerns:
This case report describes a 79-year-old male patient with a 7-year history of progressive blurred vision and a 1-day history of distended in his left eye. He underwent phacoemulsification combined with intraocular lens implantation at our facility 7 years ago.
Diagnoses:
The patient had lower vision (light perception vision) and increased intraocular pressure (IOP) (60 mmHg) in the left eye. Auxiliary inspection found that the left eye had deep anterior chamber depth (around 1 corneal thickness of the peripheral AC angle) as well as vitreous and aqueous humor opacity in the left eye. Combining the clinical symptoms and examinations, we made the diagnosis of PLG in the left eye.
Interventions:
The patient underwent trabeculectomy and extracapsular cataract extraction of the left after a stable ocular condition, during the operation to see that white chyous cortex was visible under the posterior capsule and posterior capsule membrane of the lens was avulsed circularly.
Outcomes:
The postoperative condition was stable. During the follow up of 3 months, the IOP of the left eye was stable without ocular discomfort.
Lessons:
This case reported a patient with phacolytic glaucoma in the lens cortex behind posterior capsule who underwent successful surgery, indicating spontaneous capsule rupture can occur in the posterior capsules in PLG and when this situation is detected during the operation, the posterior capsule tearing method can be applied to absorb the lens cortex sticking at the posterior surface of the posterior capsule.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)