Litcius/Paper detail

THE NOVEL USE OF HIGH-FLOW POLYIMIDE CANNULAS TO IMPROVE SILICONE OIL INJECTABILITY IN VITREORETINAL SURGERY

Maximilian Hammer, Sonja K. Schickhardt, Donald Munro, Ramin Khoramnia, Alexander Scheuerle, Christian S. Mayer, Gerd U. Auffarth

2022Retina15 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: The injection of high-viscosity silicone oil lengthens injection time. New polyimide cannulas offer a greater inner diameter than conventional metal cannulas at the same gauge. We compared the injection time for polyimide and metal cannulas at 23 G for a variety of silicone oils including a 12,500-mPas prototype oil. METHODS: In this laboratory study, injection time was measured three times per cannula and per oil. Warming the oil before injection to up to 42°C was also evaluated. Finally, the feasibility of polyimide cannulas was tested in vitrectomized porcine eyes. RESULTS: The 23-G polyimide cannula mostly decreased injection times. The time to inject 5 mL of Siluron Xtra and Siluron 5000 decreased by 6:02 (76.9%) minutes (483 vs. 121 seconds) and 12:01 (74.7%) minutes (973 vs. 252 seconds), respectively. Although the 23-G metal cannula failed to inject 12,500 mPas oil, 5 mL was injected in 10:21 minutes using the polyimide cannula. Prewarming Siluron 5000 to 42°C lowered the injection time by 9.0% and by 12.1% when using the metal or polyimide cannula, respectively. CONCLUSION: Polyimide cannulas allow a clinically relevant decrease in injection time. They may not only shorten surgery time but could also ease the use of next-generation ultra-high-viscosity silicone oils. Prewarming silicone oil leads to decreased injection times.

Topics & Concepts

Vitreoretinal surgerySilicone oilSiliconePolyimideSurgeryMedicineMaterials scienceBiomedical engineeringSilicone ElastomersOphthalmologyRetinal and Macular SurgeryIntraocular Surgery and LensesOcular Infections and Treatments