Introduction & Indications - IOP's Escape Plan
- Goal: Create a new aqueous outflow pathway to ↓ IOP, preventing optic nerve damage.
- Also known as trabeculectomy or glaucoma filtering surgery.
- Mechanism: Bypasses the trabecular meshwork, allowing aqueous humor to drain into subconjunctival space, forming a filtering bleb.

- Indications:
- Medically uncontrolled glaucoma (max tolerated medical therapy fails).
- Progressive visual field loss despite acceptable IOP.
- Laser trabeculoplasty failure.
- Specific glaucomas: e.g., neovascular, inflammatory (after control).
- Patient non-compliance/intolerance to medications.
⭐ Failure to achieve target IOP despite maximally tolerated medical therapy is the most common indication for filtration surgery.
- Target IOP: Individualized, often < 21 mmHg, or 30% reduction from baseline, or lower in advanced disease (e.g., < 12-15 mmHg).
Trabeculectomy - Gold Standard Sluice
- Goal: Creates a guarded fistula from anterior chamber (AC) to subconjunctival space, forming a filtering bleb for aqueous outflow. Bypasses trabecular meshwork.
- Indications:
- Medically uncontrolled Primary Open Angle Glaucoma (POAG) with progressive visual field (VF) loss.
- Chronic Angle Closure Glaucoma (CACG) post-Laser Peripheral Iridotomy (LPI) with persistently high Intraocular Pressure (IOP).
- Antimetabolites (prevent bleb scarring, ↑ success):
- Mitomycin C (MMC): 0.2-0.5 mg/mL applied for 1-5 min.
- 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU): 50 mg/mL (intraoperative or post-op injections).
- Key Steps:
- Ideal Bleb: Diffuse, slightly elevated, microcystic surface, avascular centrally with good peripheral vascularity.
- Complications:
- Early: Hypotony, shallow AC, bleb leak, choroidal detachment.
- Late: Bleb failure (fibrosis), cataract, blebitis/endophthalmitis (📌BRI: Bleb-Related Infection), chronic hypotony.
⭐ The most common cause of late trabeculectomy failure is subconjunctival fibrosis leading to scarring of the filtration bleb.

Other Filtration Surgeries - Beyond The Trab
- Non-Penetrating Glaucoma Surgery (NPGS):
- E.g., Deep Sclerectomy, Viscocanalostomy.
- Spares trabeculo-Descemet membrane; ↓ risk of hypotony, endophthalmitis.
- Aqueous percolates via scleral/Descemet's window. Less IOP lowering than trabeculectomy.
- Glaucoma Drainage Devices (GDDs) / Aqueous Shunts:
- E.g., Ahmed Glaucoma Valve (AGV), Baerveldt, Molteno.
- Tube diverts aqueous from anterior chamber to an equatorial plate → subconjunctival bleb.
- Indications: Failed trabeculectomy, refractory glaucomas (e.g., neovascular, uveitic).
- AGV: valved; Baerveldt: non-valved (larger plate).
- Complications: Hypertensive phase, tube migration/erosion, diplopia.

- Minimally Invasive Glaucoma Surgery (MIGS):
- E.g., iStent, Hydrus, XEN Gel Stent, PreserFlo.
- Ab-interno or ab-externo approaches; target Schlemm's canal, suprachoroidal space, or subconjunctival space.
- Safer profile, modest IOP reduction; often combined with phacoemulsification.
⭐ The "hypertensive phase" in GDDs, typically occurring 2-6 weeks post-op, is thought to be due to fibrous encapsulation around the plate, temporarily reducing outflow before channels form within the capsule an average of 3 months post-op for non-valved devices and sooner for valved devices like AGV due to its flow-restrictive mechanism from the start of surgery.
Post-Op & Complications - Blebs & Bumps

- Ideal Bleb: Diffuse, avascular, microcysts.
- Dysfunctional Blebs:
- Encapsulated (Tenon's Cyst): Localized, thick-walled, ↑IOP.
- Failing/Failed: Flat, vascularized, ↑IOP.
- Over-filtering: Large, thin, ↓IOP (hypotony).
- Leaking: Seidel test positive. Risk: hypotony, infection.
- Blebitis: Infected bleb: inflammation, discharge.
- Early: Staph.
- Late: Strep, H. flu.
- Risk: endophthalmitis. Rx: Intensive topical antibiotics.
- Hypotony Maculopathy: ↓IOP → chorioretinal folds, ↓vision.
⭐ Encapsulated blebs (Tenon's cysts) typically develop 2-8 weeks post-op, presenting as a localized, tense, elevated bleb with ↑IOP.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Trabeculectomy is the gold standard surgical procedure, creating a new aqueous outflow pathway.
- A filtering bleb under a partial-thickness scleral flap is the desired surgical outcome.
- Antifibrotic agents like Mitomycin C (MMC) or 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) are crucial to prevent bleb scarring and failure.
- Key complications include hypotony, bleb leak, blebitis, endophthalmitis, and late cataract formation.
- Non-penetrating glaucoma surgeries (e.g., deep sclerectomy) aim for ↑safety but may have ↓efficacy.
- Aqueous shunts or Glaucoma Drainage Devices (GDDs) are reserved for refractory glaucoma or failed trabeculectomies.
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