Saturday, 18 July 2009
Eye Phase 3: the cornea
A week later, I went to see Mr Au who is the specialist in corneas and corneal transplants. The cornea is the 'front window of the eye'; the part that does most of the focusing of the image which it projects onto the retina. Mine is severely damaged from all the operations I've had and because of years of glaucoma. The endothelial cells on its inner surface, if damaged, cannot renew themselves but are vital as they pump water from the cornea. If this pump isn't working, the cornea becomes waterlogged causing the blurry vision - like looking through a ground-glass screen - that I have. The only cure is to replace the endothelial cells with a graft, a new and delicate operation called a DSEK or to replace the entire cornea (full-thickness keratopathy). In either case, the graft comes from a donor, someone who has died young and generously left their eyes to be used for helping the likes of me. I already have a piece of somebody else's eye in my eye, the result of the patch graft which Miss Fenerty placed over the tube and plate she inserted to control the glaucoma - which, I am happy to say over a year later, it does effectively. As a result of this anonymous post mortem generosity, I have registered as an organ donor; the least I could do.
I had only a short wait to see Mr Au himself. He is very brisk and efficient and pleasant with it. He did several tests on different machines to enable him to determine with precision what exactly would be the best option for my eye. For various compelling reasons to do with the geometry of my 'difficult' eye, the intra-ocular lens and pupil, he feels that the best course is for me to have a full thickness keratopathy. In this operation, he makes a circular cut - using an instrument like a cookie-cutter, though a little more refined - to actually bore out a hole in the front of my eye about 7mm in diameter. Into this, he inserts a donor 'button' - the replacement cornea - which he then sutures firmly into place using very fine radial stitches. The sutures remain in place for around 18 months and I will need steroid eye drops to prevent rejection. But the new cornea should mean that I can see clearly again. At present, the image quality is so poor that I get no image fusion, no stereoscopic vision, and can barely make out the biggest letter on the standard eye chart. If I don't have this graft, the outlook is worsening vision and pain associated with the oversaturated corneal tissue. I've already had a lot of pain with this cornea and I know how unpleasant it is. The operation is not without risk but the benefits are significant.
So the choice is easy! I'm on the waiting list for an operation in about 3 months.
Thursday, 29 January 2009
Good eye news... for now
Val and I drove to Manchester on Monday early evening, a horrible busy drive when you're just used to seeing the postman and a few sheep. We stayed with my nephew Dale and his partner Deb, as previously when I was to have a major operation nearly a year ago. They live within easy public transport access (walk, tram, walk or bus) of the hospital to which I had to report by 12 noon the next day. Being there a day early made the journey much less nerve-racking. Val stayed with them while I was in hospital.
After being admitted on Tuesday, Mr Charles, the consultant examined me and we talked about the gravity of the operation. I fully understood that there were a whole raft of horrors which could occur because of my tricky eye which has been so much damaged by earlier operations. I reckon this was my 12th! There were three things to be done: an injection of Avastin to arrest the swelling of the macula (the central spot of the retina with the greatest concentration of light-detecting cells) which had been causing a semi blind spot in my central vision; removal of the old and displaced anterior chamber lens (ACIOL) and its replacement with a new one to be supported by suturing to the sclera which would also require the removal of all the jelly-like vitreous humour at the back of the eye (vitrectomy) which would be naturally replaced by the salty aqueous secretion from the ciliary body close to the iris.
Operation day came and I was gently knocked out by a very kind anaesthetist who was, he said, exactly the same age as me. A short time later, I came round and was soon back up in the ward amid rumours that things had gone rather differently than expected. I was puzzled by the lack of pain for a start and the short time in which this long and complex operation had been carried out by Mr Charles and his team. Later in the afternoon, Mr Charles appeared and after being introduced to Val - who was, of course, there with me - told me what had happened. He operates on the principle of 'do no harm' which could be paraphrased in my case as 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it'. After making one small incision with which to remove the misplaced lens, he found that the lens would actually very easily slip into the place it should have been and seemed quite secure. He was very happy at this point to not open up the eye any further for, as he had explained to me, every time this is done, more damage is done to the non-repairing endothelial cells of the inside of the cornea. This damage causes oedema, or waterlogging, of the cornea which results in the vision being variably foggy. So he decided to leave well alone, administered the Avastin injection to the macula and patched me up. And that was it. The incision, I understand, is so small that no stiches were needed. Hence the almost total absence of pain.
How long this will last is unknown. It could become displaced again in a few weeks or go on for 10 years. We just don't know. Mr Charles saw me again this morning for a final check before discharging me. All seemed to be well and no damage had been done to Miss Fenerty's fine handiwork (the tube implant, done nearly a year ago to control the glaucoma) with the pressure coming in at 10 (it is now normally between 10 and 15 whereas it used to hit the upper 30s when the glaucoma was out of control). I return to see him in 2 weeks for a routine check. I'm on the usual antibiotic and antiinflammatory drops and have to not stoop for about a week only. The eye - as I write - is painless and for the first time for months, I don't see multiple images. This means that the images from both eyes fuse properly and I get some rudimentary stereo vision. I can also just about see the letters on my laptop's keyboard. I couldn't before and as the Avastin does its job, I hope my central vision will improve some more. But with this much improvement already, I feel very pleased.
When I was waiting to be discharged this morning, I heard a cheery, "Hello Mr Lynas" in a familiar voice: it was Miss Fenerty who has so successfully sorted out my glaucoma. She remembered all about me (astonishing in my view since she must see dozens of patients every month) and we chatted briefly about her photovoltaic panels which are successfully feeding electricity into the grid. She wanted to know about the vegetables and how the weather had been for them. The upshot of this chat is that she plans to take up my invitation, proffered some time back, to come and visit Mur Crusto farm. I would, I said, be honoured!
Finally, I have to record with pleasure that my stay in hospital was made almost enjoyable by the kindly staff, male and female of all races and creeds. The food wasn't bad either, not something you hear many people say. There's lots of laughter on this eye ward, good therapy for any patient.
Tuesday, 4 November 2008
Next steps
After preliminary examinations by a junior doctor, I saw Mr Charles, the consultant, a very busy man who is constantly being interrupted by juniors seeking advice about the patients they are examining. The same sort of thing happened with Miss Fenerty.
Mr Charles had a very close look at both my eyes, pronouncing my normal one to be healthy as he did so. That's good news. As for my troublesome eye, he laid out the options. Option 1 was do nothing which would result in poor vision getting worse as the dispaced lens inside does ever more damage to the cornea's internal surface, causing increasing cloudiness - oedema - and resulting in time in virtually no vision. The lens might even slip round to the back of the eye, causing retinal detachment. Option 2 was to undergo a rather complicated operation under general anaesthetic during which he would perform several things:
- vitrectomy: removal of the vitrous jelly which fills the back of the eye. It was shreds of this which blocked the tube a while back
- an injection into the macular to clear the swelling which gives me the sea urchin effect I described in my last post
- removal of the displaced lens
- insertion and suturing of a new lens to replace it, a difficult thing to do given the state of my eye but, in his opinion, worth having a go at
He was quite open about the chances of success which are no more than good for an eye like mine. He's done many of these lens operations, he said, and none have gone wrong but there would always by a chance of various complications. My eye is, as he said, a very difficult problem. Even so, he seemed to think the risks worth taking, given the alternative. I agreed and the operation is to be in about 2 months. If the operation is successful, I should gain better vision but the cornea will not recover and so I may need a complete corneal graft in a year or so.
Before leaving, I had to have the usual pre-operative check-up: blood samples, ECG, MRSA swabs and so on. I also had to have some measurements of the eye to enable them to order a new lens to the specifications needed by my eye. These measurement were not easy, as it turned out, since the normal laser machine couldn't record anything because of the cloudy cornea. So the operator of the machine had to use an ultrasound proble pressed against the eye surface repeatedly. Her aim was to get consistent results and it was some time before she managed to do this.
I arrived home in the evening to an empty and dark house because Val had left that same morning to visit Suzanne in Sheffield for 3 days. I was rather tired having had a poor night's sleep - as one does when needing to get up very early. I had a good sleep last night and today, reflecting on what will be happening, feel fairly positive about it all.
Saturday, 11 October 2008
One damn thing after another
Some good news: Those were the symptoms which I recounted to Miss Fenerty. Firstly, though, she checked the pressure. It was 10 (and had been 12 three weeks ago when I had it checked at the local optician). So there's some good news: it really does look as though the glaucoma problem which has affected me since Fiji days in the early 1970s (though I didn't then know it) is solved. Big plus for Miss Fenerty's surgical skills and knowhow.
The soreness seems to be related to the loose ACIOL (anterior chamber intraocular lens) about which I am being seen in early November by another specialist. This is constantly causing low-level damage to the eye which then reacts by becoming inflamed. Some steroidal eye drops, she thought, would help: Prednisolone. Twenty four hours later, as I write this, it looks like she's right. I'm using the drops and, so far, the eye has stopped being sore.
Introducing a new player: macular oedema To get a diagnosis of the 'sea urchin' issue, Miss Fenerty at once sent me off for a laser scan of the affected area of the retina. This remarkble procedure, which took about 20 seconds, resulted in weird-looking 3D images and cross sections of my macular (the central area of the retina which is packed with cone cells giving the acute vision we all need for detail like reading) which I then whisked back to Miss Fenerty. I have fluid which has accumulated underneath the macular, lifting the retinal layer like a hill (in the images) where no hill should be. The result is the symptoms I have described. The first line of defence is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory called Acular - which I am now also using. The likely cause of this oedema (aka 'edema' [US] meaning 'waterlogging' and which already affects my damaged cornea) is this lens and the inflammation it is causing.
So I await my next visit in just over 3 weeks to see the ACIOL specialist, Mr Charles. By that time, we'll know whether the oedema is reduced and, if it's not, I would expect that another operation to remove the injurious lens and, I hope, replace it with a new and stable version, will be very soon after. The saga will continue...
Saturday, 9 August 2008
Success, but what happens next?
The issue is the lens, known as the ACIOL (Anterior Chamber Intra-Ocular Lens). This needs to be removed soon and replaced, but by what? Because my iris was partly removed in the original cataract operation back in 1972, there are no proper anchorage points for a lens - which is why there's trouble with the one in there now. Further damage has been done by the 10 subsequent operations. So how do they fit a new lens and anchor it? There are various possibilities, none sounding ideal, but Miss Fenerty is arranging for me to see a lens specialist at the hospital so he can take a look and see what would be the best option. The results of that consultation will be my next post in a few weeks time.
Monday, 28 July 2008
A nasty shock and some zapping
Because my original lens was clumsily removed with its capsule in 1972 - a procedure called intracapsular extraction and not now carried out - there is nothing save the inserted artificial lens to separate the aqueous humour at the front of the eye from the vitreous jelly which fills the eyeball. Because the artificial lens inserted at Torbay hospital about 12 years ago has moved out of place slightly, shreds of the jelly are actually being sucked into the tube draining the eye and had, like a cork in a bottle, blocked the entrance to the tube. Not surprising, then, that the pressure had rocketed.
But there was a solution, albeit temporary. Miss Lewis conducted me to their YAG laser room almost immediately. Because this was a sort of operation, I had to sign a 'consent' and then she began the process of zapping (and it really sounds like that) the blockage using a special large contact lens pressed gently into my eye. It's not a painful procedure; just uncomfortable and I find I jump slightly with each zap, not knowing when she was going to do it. She had a little trouble with air bubbles under the contact lens but ended up zapping the blockage about 30 times. Then she pressed my eyeball with her finger and declared that she thought it was softer and that she had been able to see little zapped bits actually being sucked through into the tube which suggested it was now clear and draining rapidly. A pressure check back in her room quickly confirmed that the pressure had plummeted to 20. Phew! She asked me to come back in half an hour before leaving to see if the pressure had stabilised.
Half an hour later, she whisked me into her room again, measured the pressure and said, with a half smile, "It's 18. Now get out of here before there's any more trouble!" I did, feeling much relieved because it is now fairly clear that the tube implant operation is doing its job properly just so long as it doesn't block again. Of course, it could block again and Miss Fenerty said that what they will probably do now - and she needs to consult other specialists about this - is go in to the eye and remove the displaced lens, replacing it with one properly suited to my difficult eye and at the same time, clear out these shreds of debris. Whether they'll be able to do the proposed corneal graft at the same time I don't yet know. I'm going back, yet again, in 2 weeks and should learn more. I'm all for getting all these things done as soon as possible because my vision is still very poor. Miss Lewis advises me to go to a local optician to get the pressure checked this week - in case of further blockages. If it's high again, I'll be summoned back to the hospital and something will be done fairly quickly. Unfortunately, there are no symptoms of high pressure, the insidious thing about glaucoma. Permanent damage is done to the optic nerve and you're unaware of it.
So who knows what will happen next? I am heartily sick of all this travelling but there is light at the end of the tunnel...
Saturday, 12 July 2008
Can there be good news with glaucoma?
Read on for full details, but not if you're squeamish in which case, skip to the final paragraph.
The operation was to remove the supramid suture from the tube and plate implant in my eye. This is essentially a thin bit of string which partly blocks the tube implant so as to moderate the flow of liquid from the front of the eye. Although it sounds daft to have it there at all, there are good reasons for it. It is far more dangerous to the eye to reduce the pressure dramatically - a condition called hypotony - than to keep the pressure fairly high whilst everything heals up. For some people, the tube with its supramid thread is enough to relieve the pressure and nothing more need be done. Naturally, I am the difficult one who needs this extra tweak.
It was slightly bizarre lying on the operating table chatting to Miss Fenerty (surgeon and senior consultant) about wind turbines, green manures and her recent installation on her house of a 1.8kW photovoltaic device. We share many interests apart from eyes! I should add that this chat went on whilst she was anaesthetising the eye, not during the actual procedure which wasn't as easy as it should have been due, basically, to the fact that my eye has been cut open so many times that it contains a great deal of scar tissue which made inserting the original drainage tube and plate quite tricky. The process is in itself quite painful in some of its procedures like injecting anaesthetic into the tissues surrounding the eye which help immobilise the eye.
The supramid suture end normally lies under the conjunctival membrane (the clear covering over the white of the eye, the sclera) but it was difficult to locate because of the profusion of blood capillaries in the inner corner of the eye. Needless to say, Miss Fenerty and her assisting registrar finally spotted it and made a tiny incision and slowly, not without a little difficulty, reeled out the suture. They also removed several other stitches from other parts of the eye from the previous operation. All that remained to be done was for a dissolvable stitch to go in to close the incision.
Having an operation of this sort under local anaesthesia has its advantages. I was able to simply stand up and walk back to the ward after it was over and I get to hear all that goes on... which can be a disadvantage too. I found myself constantly having to consciously relax because I was so tense. Occasional sharp intakes of breath from me because of sudden intense pain resulted in instant reactions from Miss Fenerty who quickly added more lidocain. My eye is difficult to anaesthetise because, once again, of scar tissue and the location of the plate and suture which would normally be elswhere in the eye. But it was good to be able to ask the odd 'what are you doing now?' question and have it answered right away.
In my follow-up the next morning, the pressure was 20, top end of normal, and this without any glaucoma medcation. It had been 22 on the morning of the operation but that was with every single medication available including Diamox, the last resort which I've been on for 6 weeks when it was clear that the pressure was becoming way too high. Diamox has unpleasant side effects but it did allow me to go on holiday. So for the first time for decades, I am actually not on any glaucoma medication, some of which have side-effects of their own. In fact, I am still using eye drops, 4 times per day, but these are anti-inflammatory and antibiotic and are standard after your eye has been cut open.
My eye at present looks a little grotesque - all red as capillaries swell and grow to repair the damage done by the surgery. It's a bit sore and there's often a noticeable pricking sensation in the inner corner where the dissolvable suture is located. All this is normal and to be expected. The suture will dissolve and the soreness will dissipate. I have anti-soreness ointment and artificial tears to add when I feel the need of them.
I feel I should be celebrating this apparent success but I am hesitant to do so until I've been for my next follow-up appointment. Long dismal experience tells me that my glaucoma is an intractable condition and every effort to stop it in this troublesome eye is doomed to failure. I am optimistic though because I know I am in the hands of one of Europe's best glaucoma surgeons. The fact that Miss Fenerty has sent me off without medication suggests she is pretty confident that all should be well. The anti-inflammatory drops themselves cause an increase in pressure which should fall when I stop using them in a few weeks. On the evening of operation day, I met one of her deputies, the charming Mr Gandhi who I always ask to see when I go for checkups. We had a long chat about Green issues and about my eye, details of which he remembered perfectly even though he didn't have the notes and wasn't formally seeing me about it. One thing he said was that in his experience, removal of the supramid suture was usually sufficient to control the pressure and he knew of only two cases where further intervention had been needed. For further intervention is possible and, if necessary, can be repeated over and over again to keep the pressure controlled. It's a process called 'needling' in which the scar tissues blocking the exits from the plate are broken up to improve drainage. So it really looks like, one way or another, my glaucoma will be controlled.
There's more. At present, all I can see with my troubled eye is a fuzzy double image. Miss Fenerty and Mr Gandhi have told me of all the incredible procedures which can now be carried out to improve vision in people like me with 'compromised' corneas (the 'front window' of the eye). Miss Fenerty is optimistic that one or more of these will be suitable for me to regain some reasonable vision from this badly knocked-about eye. I will be learning more about these in the next few weeks. Meanwhile, one thing I have learnt from all this is patience!