MENISCUS MICROPYON: An Ophthalmoscopic Sign Possibly Associated with Epiretinal Proliferation after Retinal Surgery with Gas Tamponade

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Abstract

Purpose:To describe an ophthalmoscopic sign, termed a meniscus micropyon, and its possible association with proliferative vitreoretinopathy/epiretinal membrane (ERM) formation after retinal surgery with gas tamponade.Methods:Patients with intravitreal gas were examined postoperatively by one of six vitreoretinal surgeons from four institutions. A micropyon was defined as a white-yellow, solid-Appearing consolidation along the meniscus (i.e., the fluid-gas interface).Results:A micropyon was visualized and photographed in 49 patients who received intravitreal gas. Preoperatively, retinal breaks were present in all 49 eyes and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment in 45 (92%). Postoperatively, 39 eyes (80%) developed epiretinal proliferation: 16 eyes (33%) developed recurrent rhegmatogenous retinal detachment from proliferative vitreoretinopathy, 6 eyes (12%) re-detached without frank proliferative vitreoretinopathy, 9 eyes (18%) developed postoperative ERM/worsening, and 8 eyes (16%) had postoperative ERM but no preoperative optical coherence tomography to determine if the postoperative ERM was new or worsening. The single-operation anatomical success in eyes with a micropyon was 51%, which was lower than that of a contemporaneous rhegmatogenous retinal detachment control group (91%) in which no micropyon was detected. In two patients, micropyons were biopsied during pars plana vitrectomy and examined histopathologically; they consist predominantly of white blood cells.Conclusion:The meniscus micropyon is an ophthalmoscopic sign that can occur after retinal surgery with gas tamponade. Features that distinguish a micropyon from postvitrectomy fibrin/fibrinoid syndrome include delayed appearance, hyperautofluorescence, absence of translucent strands or sheets in the anterior chamber or vitreous cavity, and the histopathologic identification of white blood cells. A clinically detectable micropyon may be a biomarker of proliferative vitreoretinopathy/ERM formation.

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Russell, J. F., Fowler, B. J., Al-Khersan, H., Lazzarini, T. A., Patel, N. A., Syed, N. A., & Russell, S. R. (2024). MENISCUS MICROPYON: An Ophthalmoscopic Sign Possibly Associated with Epiretinal Proliferation after Retinal Surgery with Gas Tamponade. Retina, 44(10), 1766–1776. https://doi.org/10.1097/IAE.0000000000004176

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