Staphyloma - Scleral Bulge Basics
- Definition: A localized, outward bulging of the outer sclera, which is thinned and lined by uveal tissue.
- Primary Cause: Underlying weakness of the sclera, often secondary to inflammation, injury, or progressive high myopia.
⭐ Staphyloma implies ectasia of the sclera with uveal tissue incarceration.
Etiopathogenesis - Weak Wall Origins
- Origins of Scleral Weakness:
- Congenital: Defective scleral development.
- Acquired:
- Inflammation: Severe scleritis (esp. necrotizing), endophthalmitis.
- Trauma: Penetrating injuries.
- Surgery: Complications from glaucoma surgery, pterygium excision (esp. with mitomycin C).
- Degenerative: Pathological high myopia causing scleral stretching and thinning.
- Sustained ↑IOP: Uncontrolled glaucoma (e.g., absolute glaucoma) exerting pressure.
- Mechanism: Progressive scleral thinning and weakening, combined with or worsened by ↑IOP, results in scleral ectasia (outward bulging) lined by prolapsed uveal tissue.
⭐ Necrotizing scleritis is a common cause of anterior staphyloma.
Classification - Mapping the Bulge
📌 AICE-P: Anterior, Intercalary, Ciliary, Equatorial, Posterior.
| Type | Location | Etiology/Associations | Clinical Sign |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior | Cornea/limbus | Perforating ulcer/trauma, keratectasia | Ectatic cornea/limbus, iris incarceration |
| Intercalary | Limbus to ciliary body (ant. sclera) | Scleritis, trauma, surgery, glaucoma | Bulge ant. sclera, iris root lining |
| Ciliary | Over ciliary body (2-3 mm from limbus) | Scleritis, trauma, absolute glaucoma | Bluish bulge over ciliary body, ciliary body lining |
| Equatorial | Equator (vortex vein exits) | Scleritis, degenerations (pathological myopia) | Equatorial bulge, often multiple |
| Posterior | Posterior pole | Pathological myopia (common), post. scleritis | Not visible externally; myopic fundus, ↓VA |
⭐ Posterior staphyloma is a hallmark of pathological myopia.
Clinical Features & Diagnosis - Eye Spy Swelling
- Symptoms:
- Decreased vision (often progressive, can be sudden)
- Ocular pain, discomfort, or photophobia
- Cosmetic blemish from the noticeable bulge
- Signs:
- Characteristic bulge: Bluish/dark coloration due to underlying uveal tissue visible through thinned sclera.
- Scleral thinning: Palpable or visible thinning at the staphyloma site.
- Transillumination: Positive - light transmits easily through the ectatic area.
⭐ Transillumination is a key clinical sign for staphyloma, indicating significant scleral thinning with uveal tissue involvement.
- Investigations:
- Slit-lamp biomicroscopy: Essential for detailed examination of anterior staphylomas.
- Indirect Ophthalmoscopy: To visualize and assess posterior staphylomas.
- B-scan ultrasonography: Confirms posterior staphyloma; shows characteristic scleral excavation and uveal tissue lining.
- OCT (Optical Coherence Tomography): Provides detailed cross-sectional images, delineating tissue layers.

Management & Complications - Patch & Protect
-
Management
- Conservative: Treat underlying cause (e.g., scleritis), lubrication, protective eyewear.
- Medical: Intraocular pressure (IOP) control (e.g., beta-blockers, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors) if glaucoma is a risk or present.
- Surgical: Scleral reinforcement graft (fascia lata, donor sclera, pericardium) for impending/actual perforation or rapid progression.
⭐ Scleral reinforcement is indicated for rapidly progressing staphylomas or those at high risk of perforation.
-
Complications
- Progressive myopia & astigmatism
- Amblyopia (especially in children)
- Retinal detachment
- Secondary glaucoma
- Spontaneous perforation
- Visual loss
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Staphyloma: An ectasia of thinned sclera lined by uveal tissue, from weakened scleral resistance.
- Posterior staphyloma is a hallmark of pathological myopia, located at the posterior pole.
- Anterior staphyloma involves the cornea, often after corneal perforation with iris involvement.
- Other types by location: Intercalary (limbus), Ciliary (over ciliary body), Equatorial (at equator).
- Presents as a dark, bluish-black bulge due to underlying pigmented uvea visible through thinned sclera.
- Key Complications: High astigmatism, secondary glaucoma, retinal detachment (especially posterior type).
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