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Shear and extensional rheometry of PDMS tamponade agents used in vitroretinal surgery.

Day, Michael; Blanchard, Rowan-Louise; English, Rob; Dobbie, Tom; Williams, Rachel L; Garvey, Michael J; Wong, David

Authors

Michael Day

Rowan-Louise Blanchard

Rob English

Tom Dobbie

Rachel L Williams

Michael J Garvey

David Wong



Abstract

The emulsification of low molar mass silicone oil (PDMS)-based tamponade agents used in the treatment of complex retinal detachments is a significant clinical problem leading to the patient suffering impairment of vision whilst the tamponade is in place. This is particularly the case in temporal postoperative applications where the tamponade can remain in the ocular cavity for several months. The majority of clinicians prefer to use a PDMS fluid of kinematic viscosity 1000cS, which offers ease of manual injection. Work is progressing towards the development of tamponades with a reduced tendency to emulsify, through specific tailoring of rheology and interfacial properties. Greater knowledge of the mechanism of intraocular emulsification is being elucidated and has lead to the development of ‘polymer modified’ tamponades with enhanced performance. Such materials are formulated by the addition of a high molecular weight PDMS to the base PDMS oil. Measurement of the shear viscosity at moderate shear rates is useful in predicting performance during manual injection into the eye. However, the determination of the behaviour in both shear and extension at high strain rates is useful in predicting resistance to intraocular emulsification and in informing future modelling studies. Initial experiments focussed on rotational rheometry (shear) and capillary breakup rheometry (CaBER – extension). A range of polymer modified tamponades were characterised - based on PDMS base oils from 500-5000 cS and containing up to 30% by weight PDMS of molecular weight varying in the range 100000-800000 Da. Even though the volume occupancy of the polymeric additive ranged from dilute to significantly interpenetrated, a linear response was observed in each case. However, subsequent experiments using capillary rheometry lead to the observation of non-linear behaviour and significant differences between the formulations. In contrast to the base oils, the polymer modified formulations showed significant tension thinning. Systems with lower high strain rate tensile viscosities gave improved performance in in-vitro emulsification tests and are now the subject of clinical trials. The thermodynamic interaction between the polymeric additive and the PDMS oil ‘solvent’ was also considered. Interestingly, the PDMS base oils appeared to behave as relatively ‘good’ solvents, the chains of the polymeric additives being considerably expanded from their unperturbed dimensions.

Citation

Day, M., Blanchard, R., English, R., Dobbie, T., Williams, R. L., Garvey, M. J., & Wong, D. (2008). Shear and extensional rheometry of PDMS tamponade agents used in vitroretinal surgery.

Conference Name XV International Congress on Rheology
Start Date Aug 3, 2008
End Date Aug 8, 2008
Publication Date 2008
Deposit Date Apr 3, 2014
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Keywords Retinal detachment; tamponade; intraocular emulsification;
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/6734