Circumferential canal surgery: a brief history

Purpose of review Most microinvasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS) procedures bypass outflow resistance residing proximally in the trabecular meshwork and inner wall of Schlemm's canal. A novel procedure combining trabeculotomy with viscodilation adds to this by also addressing distal resistance of the canal and collector channel ostia. This review examines the development and evidence for both trabeculotomy and canaloplasty separately and the combination in a single procedure. Recent findings Recent aqueous angiography studies have confirmed the segmental nature of outflow through Schlemm's canal highlighting the need to address distal outflow pathway resistance. Combined trabeculotomy and viscodilation ab interno is a novel approach with a new purpose-designed device (OMNI Surgical System) becoming available to surgeons in early 2018. Recent results as both a standalone and combined with cataract procedure demonstrate significant intraocular pressure reductions with an average 41% reduction from baseline in the pseudophakic group. Summary Targeting both distal as well as proximal points of outflow resistance in the conventional pathway may prove to be a highly efficacious MIGS modality. Additional large prospective studies are currently ongoing to confirm these preliminary results.
Source: Current Opinion in Ophthalmology - Category: Opthalmology Tags: GLAUCOMA: Edited by Donald L. Budenz Source Type: research