Topical fluorouracil. II. Postoperative administration in an animal model of glaucoma filtering surgery
D. K. Heuer, M. G. Gressel, R. K. Parrish 2nd, R. Folberg, J. E. Dillberger and N. H. Altman
Unilateral posterior lip sclerectomies were performed in ten owl monkeys.
Five milligrams of fluorouracil was injected subconjunctivally in each
operated eye immediately after surgery. Three drops (approximately 2.4
mg/drop) of fluorouracil were instilled ten minutes apart in each operated
eye twice daily on postoperative days 1 through 7 and once daily on
postoperative days 8 through 15, 17, 19, and 21. One monkey died on the
seventh postoperative day; its death could not be attributed to systemic
fluorouracil toxicity. All of the operated eyes had filtering blebs after
the full course of fluorouracil, but seven also had corneal epithelial
defects. By the seventh postoperative week, two of the operated eyes
manifested moderately severe corneal opacification. Ten weeks
postoperatively, the electroretinographic a- and b-wave amplitudes averaged
17% and 12% less, respectively, in the seven operated eyes without
clinically significant corneal opacification than in the unoperated fellow
eyes. Only two eyes had blebs after the 12th postoperative week.
Histopathologic examination was performed on five eyes, of which only two
revealed patent sclerostomies. Although topical fluorouracil appears to
delay bleb scarring, the corneal findings suggest that it may be more toxic
than subconjunctival fluorouracil.