Hyphema
Hyphema
Hyphema
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
AND COMPLICATION
OF HYPHEMA
Rince Liyanti
Introduction
HYPHEMA
Definition: Blood in the anterior chamber of eye,
which forming a coat which can be seen by naked eye
Microhyphema is the red blood cells in the aqueous
humor of the anterior chamber without grossly
visible blood
Most frequently caused by ocular trauma, after
intraocular surgery, and also can occur spontaneously
Introduction
The annual incidence is in Male, between
ages 10-20 years.
A tear at the anterior aspect of the ciliary body is the
most common site of bleeding and occurs in about 71% of
cases
Anatomy
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C
H
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Anatomy
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Anatomy
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B
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Pathophysiology
Mechanism of Traumatic Hyphema
Compressive
force to the
globe or
trauma
Injury to the
iris, ciliary body,
trabecular
meshwork, and
their associated
vasculature
Accumulation
of blood cells
within the
anterior
chamber
Pathophysiology
Pathophysiology
Surgery (Intraoperatif, early, late) :
Trauma directly in the siliar body and iris, dilatation
of the vessel post surgery
Spontan Hyphema :
Iris vessel fragility, so the minor
trauma might precipitate hyphema, or in patients
using drugs that alter platelet or thrombin
function
Classification
Hyphema is classified by the amount of blood in
the anterior chamber
Complication
Increased Intraocular Pressure
IOP is increased because of :
Occlusion of trabecular meshwork by clot, inflammatory
cell or RBC debris
Pupillary block due to blood clot
Peripheral anterior synechiae
Other late causes : damaged trabecular meshwork with
angle recession, fibrosis of trabecular meshwork,
siderosis of trabecular endothelium and ghost cell
glaucoma
Complication
Secondary Hemorrhage/ Rebleeding
Usually occurs on the third day or the fourth day, but it
may occur from the second day to the seventh day after
trauma
Size of the hyphema increases
A layer of fresh blood is looked over the clot
Darker clot in the anterior chamber
Dispersed of the erythrocytes appear over the clot
Complication
Posterior and Peripheral Anterior Synechiae
Persistence of the hyphema for more than 9 days
formation of peripheral anterior
synechiae (PAS).
Synechia formation is the result of inflammation
or clot organization
Complication
Corneal Bloodstaining
Corneal bloodstaining tends to occur in the
larger hyphemas, rebleeding, prolonged clot
duration, sustained increased intraocular
pressure, and corneal
endothelial cell dysfunction
The earliest sign of corneal
bloodstaining is a straw
yellow discoloration of the
deep stroma
Complication
Optic Atrophy
In the setting of traumatic hyphema, optic
atrophy tends to occur as a result of
elevated intraocular pressure or due to optic
nerve contusion
The risk optic atrophy related to elevated
intraocular pressure if remain at > 50 mm Hg
for 5 days or > 35 mm Hg for 7 days
Conclusion
1
2
80%
L/O/G/O
Thank You..