Spontaneous attachment of complex Descemet's membrane detachment following multiple failed interventions.
Shikha GuptaKarthikeyan MahalingamTushar AgarwalPublished in: BMJ case reports (2021)
We describe a case with complex Descemet membrane detachment (DMD) which persisted despite initial two failed surgical attempts to appose the ocular tissues. However, over time, tissue alignment was obtained spontaneously. A 60-year-old woman, operated trabeculectomy, had a total DMD intraoperatively during a complicated cataract surgery. Initial attempt to DM repositioning with intracameral air injection failed. Anterior Segment Optical Coherence Tomography (ASOCT) showed detachment of both DM and pre-Descemet's layer (PDL). After consultation with a corneal surgeon, patient was again attempted for Intra-operative Optical Coherence Tomography (iOCT)-guided settlement of DMD with intracameral air which again failed. So, the patient was registered for lamellar corneal transplant, but at 3 months follow-up, DM had spontaneously attached, confirmed on ASOCT. This case shows for the first time that even complex DMDs involving PDL, can spontaneously appose despite failed surgical interventions.