An intraocular infection is the most terrible complication after a trabeculectomy, usually with significant anatomical consequences and irreversible functional impairment. The case of a 40-year-old male patient with congenital glaucoma, submitted to a trabeculectomy on both eyes at the age of 13, is presented. At the age of 32 a second trabeculectomy with mitomycin C was performed on the right eye. Eight years later he presented with an endophthalmitis in the same eye. Despite intensive local treatment and intravitreous injection, a hypotrophic amaurotic eye resulted with total cataract and retinal detachment.
Panophthalmitis; Trabeculectomy; Mitomycin; Antibacterial agents; Case reports