Endocapsular hematoma. Description and treatment of a unique form of postoperative hemorrhage
J. C. Hagan 3rd and D. E. Gaasterland
Midwest Eye Institute of Kansas City Inc., MO 64116.
Endocapsular hematoma, to our knowledge, is a previously unreported type of
postoperative hemorrhage. In this condition, blood collects in the narrow
space between the anterior surface of the posterior capsule and the
posterior optic surface of a posterior chamber intraocular lens.
Endocapsular hematoma differs from anterior chamber hyphema in several
ways: the location of the blood is in the endocapsular space, a small
amount of endocapsular blood can cause visually disabling symptoms, the
blood in the endocapsular space often fails to reabsorb, and neodymium-YAG
laser capsulotomy can be used to drain the endocapsular blood into the
vitreous cavity. We present six cases of endocapsular hematoma.
Neodymium-YAG laser capsulotomy was successfully used to drain the
endocapsular hematoma in three of these cases.