Inferior intravitreal injection site associated with a higher incidence of post-injection endophthalmitis
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    Abstract:

    AIM:To determine whether inferior injections had a higher incidence of post-injection endophthalmitis than superior injections. The incidence of endophthalmitis is higher for inferior than superior trabeculectomy filtering blebs, possibly due to bacteria pooling in the inferior tear lake.

    METHODS: A practice-wide database of endophthalmitis cases identified 5 occurring during the two-year study period. A retrospective review of 8 672 injections in 1 121 eyes of 909 patients treated during the same two-year study period was performed in order to assess the injection site location.

    RESULTS: Five eyes developed presumed infectious endophthalmitis. Eighty percent of endophthalmitis cases were injected inferiorly, even though 84.6% of the total cohort was injected superiorly. The odds ratio of infection associated with inferior injection location is 22.1(P=0.006).

    CONCLUSION:Endophthalmitis after intravitreal injection is rare, occurring in only 0.025% of injections overall. Avoiding intravitreal injections in the inferior quadrants may further reduce the rate of endophthalmitis.

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Gowtham Jonna, Daniel B. Roth, Howard F. Fine, et al. Inferior intravitreal injection site associated with a higher incidence of post-injection endophthalmitis. Guoji Yanke Zazhi( Int Eye Sci) 2015;15(5):750-754

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Publication History
  • Received:June 29,2014
  • Revised:January 27,2015
  • Adopted:
  • Online: May 05,2015
  • Published: