Residual Nonemulsified SO

Residual Nonemulsified SO

Residual Nonemulsified SO
Residual Nonemulsified SO


Role of Silicone Oil (SO) in Vitreoretinal Surgery:
• SO is commonly used as a tamponade in vitreoretinal surgery to manage complex retinal detachments.
Postoperative emulsification of SO is a significant complication, leading to issues like glaucoma, keratopathy, and inflammation due to emulsified droplets in the anterior chamber, retina, or optic nerve.

Residual Nonemulsified SO and Emulsification:
Residual nonemulsified SO persists after conventional removal techniques (e.g., repeated fluid-air exchange [FAX] and passive drainage [PD]), contributing to postoperative emulsification.
Residual nonemulsified SO ranges from 2.75 to 24.71 μL, with no significant difference between PD and repeated FAX or between 1,000 cSt and 5,000 cSt SO viscosities (P>0.05).
• Residual nonemulsified SO forms a floating slick at the air/balanced salt solution (BSS) interface due to buoyancy, which is resistant to aspiration due to high viscosity.

Mechanisms of SO Emulsification:
Emulsification is driven by saccadic eye movements, shear stress from BSS infusion, and biosurfactants (e.g., proteins) that lower interfacial tension at the SO/BSS interface.
BSS infusion during repeated FAX (even at low flow rates of 5 mL/min) generates small SO droplets due to interface fluctuations, enhancing emulsification.
• Residual SO adheres to the retina, and shear stress from BSS flow deforms the SO/BSS/retina contact line, forming emulsified droplets (1–2 μm in size).

Conventional SO Removal Techniques:
Repeated FAX (Triple-FAX) involves alternating air and BSS to remove residual SO, with the aspiration probe ideally at the SO/BSS interface; however, it is ineffective for nonemulsified SO slick removal.
Passive drainage (PD) involves prolonged BSS extrusion for 15 minutes but also fails to eliminate residual nonemulsified SO.
Challenges in SO removal: High SO viscosity, adhesion to ocular surfaces, and small-gauge probes (e.g., 25-gauge) limit complete removal, leaving residual SO in surgically inaccessible areas.

Study Methods and Findings:
In vitro model: Simulated SO slick removal using a 25-gauge probe at three aspiration positions (within SO, at SO/BSS interface, within BSS) showed no effective removal of nonemulsified SO (P>0.05), with BSS infusion causing droplet formation.
Ex vivo porcine eye model: Quantified residual nonemulsified SO (2.75–24.71 μL) using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) after standard 23-gauge vitrectomy, confirming persistence of both nonemulsified and emulsified SO.
FTIR quantification: Used Si-O-Si bond absorption (1,000–1,100 cm⁻¹) to measure residual SO dissolved in dichloromethane, avoiding contamination from syringe lubricants.

Clinical Implications:
Residual nonemulsified SO is a source of postoperative emulsification, potentially forming 0.66–5.93 × 10⁹ emulsified droplets, leading to complications.
Preoperative emulsification incidence is low (~5%), but postoperative detection rises to 13–24%, partly due to residual nonemulsified SO.
• Current techniques are limited by poor visualization during FAX (air flux blurs the surgical field) and SO adhesion to the retina, necessitating optimized removal strategies.

Limitations and Future Directions:
• Study used in vitro and ex vivo models, requiring in vivo validation.
• Did not explore underlying causes of emulsification beyond BSS infusion and adhesion.
Future improvements: Develop alternative removal techniques, optimize BSS flow rates, and enhance visualization to minimize residual SO and emulsification-related complications.
Citation
Chen Y, Li KKW, Steel DH, Chan YK. Residual Silicone Oil Does Appear After Conventional Removal and Contributes to Postoperative Emulsification. *Retina*. 2025;45(4):630-638. doi:10.1097/IAE.0000000000004091.