Posters
Postmortem evaluation of wound healing after Descemet's membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK)
Poster Details
First Author: T.Müller THE NETHERLANDS
Co Author(s): I. Lavy R. Verdijk M. Bruinsma J. Parker P. Binder G. Melles
Abstract Details
Purpose:
To describe the histologic features of postmortem eyes after Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) and their potential clinical implications.
Setting:
Netherlands Institute of Innovative Ocular Surgery
Methods:
Eleven postmortem corneas of eight patients, who underwent DMEK surgery for Fuchs endothelial dystrophy with an average postoperative time of 4 �Â�± 1.9 years were procured after death and processed for light microscopy evaluation.
Results:
Nine eyes showed a ��normal�� anatomy in the corneal center. One eye had an anatomically 'normal' periphery, ten showed peripheral abnormalities: in nine, the DMEK-graft overlapped with the host edge of the descemetorhexis; one eye showed a acellular scarring overlying a portion of the DMEK-graft that was detached followed by spontaneously adherence; three eyes showed graft folds with scar-tissue anteriorly; in two eyes (same patient), the anterior banded layer of the host DM was still in-situ across the cornea (both required re-bubbling); and two eyes showed host DM-remnants within the corneo-limbal tunnel incision that may have interfered with wound healing.
Conclusions:
Incomplete host DM removal may relate to postoperative DMEK graft detachment and wound instability. Graft detachments may re-attach with interface scarring. Re-bubbling procedures may be performed within 4-6 weeks, before scarring of detached graft portions occurs.
Financial Disclosure:
NONE