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Safety and Feasibility of Sutureless Pars-plana Vitrectomy in Sub-Tenon Anesthesia (SAFE-VISA)

R

RWTH Aachen University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Vitreoretinal Diseases

Treatments

Procedure: minimally invasive vitrectomy under subtenon anaesthesia

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this prospective study is to investigate the feasibility of performing minimally invasive vitrectomy under sub-tenon anesthesia in terms of intraoperative patients' tolerance and the surgeon's confidence. In particular, the tolerance and pain sensation during the operation as well as the possible perception of light and colour sensations are to be recorded with the help of questionnaires. In addition, the surgeon's impressions regarding eye motility, chemosis and general feasibility will be evaluated.

Full description

A prospective, one-center clinical trial to identify the safety and feasibility of sutureless pars-plana vitrectomy performed in sub-tenon anesthesia.

Background:

In Germany pars-plana vitrectomies are mostly performed in general anesthesia. This requires the immediate availability of a trained anesthesiology team, which is not always granted, especially in urgent eye disease (i.e. endophthalmitis, high risk retinal detachment). Furthermore, some patients are not suitable for general anesthesia due to systemic diseases (i.e. cardio-vascular diseases). There are several procedures of local ocular anesthesia (i.e. peribulbar, retrobulbar, sub-tenon anesthesia). The main advantage of sub-tenon anesthesia is the use of a blunt cannula limiting the risk of potential complications.

Purpose:

The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety of local sub-tenon anesthesia procedure for sutureless vitrectomy (anesthetic mixture: 2ml xylocaine and 2ml bupivacaine) in a prospective clinical study design.

Objectives:

Primary outcome: The evaluation of 1. sensation of pain, 2. patients' intraoperative discomfort and 3. visual sensations using the standardized questionnaires (WONG-BAKER Faces Scale, Visual Analog Scale and individual questions).

Secondary Outcome: The evaluation of 1. chemosis, 2. eye movement, 3. surgeon's general feeling of comfort during surgery (rating scale).

Enrollment

67 patients

Sex

All

Ages

40+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age over 40 years

  • Presence of a clinical condition that requires surgical treatment with vitrectomy and does not necessarily require general anesthesia (retinal detachment, endophthalmitis, vitreous hemorrhage, after silicone oil surgery, vitreomacular traction, epiretinal gliosis, macular holes, subretinal bleeding, lens luxation).

    • The medical indication for vitrectomy is not linked to study participation. Not until the patient has consented to the vitrectomy (standardized information forms) potential study subjects will be approached to participate in the clinical trial.
  • Willingness to participate in the clinical trial

  • Understanding the objectives of the clinical trial and the study process

  • Signed informed consent form

Exclusion criteria

  • Concomitant diseases of the eye

    • State after filtering glaucoma operations
    • Distinct corneal opacities, which make the examination considerably more difficult
    • Complicated proliferative vitreoretinopathy
  • Lack of understanding of the study, its objectives and study conduct

  • Psychiatric diseases

  • Pregnancy

  • Simultaneous participation in another clinical trial

Trial design

67 participants in 2 patient groups

minimally invasive vitrectomy under subtenon anaesthesia
Treatment:
Procedure: minimally invasive vitrectomy under subtenon anaesthesia
minimally invasive vitrectomy under general anaesthesia
Treatment:
Procedure: minimally invasive vitrectomy under subtenon anaesthesia

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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