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2874: Morgagnian cataract with zonulopathy

Close-up view of an eye showing Morgagnian cataract with zonulopathy, highlighting the early CTR insertion during surgery.

A Morgagnian cataract (named after Giovanni Morgagni the Italian father of anatomic pathology from the 1700s!) represents a very late stage of cortical cataract progression, where the lens cortex completely liquefies into a milky white fluid. This transformation allows the dense, brownish-yellow nucleus to sink inferiorly within the capsular bag due to gravity.

The primary surgical challenge, however, is the nearly universal presence of profound zonulopathy. As the lens becomes hypermature, it undergoes significant fluctuations in volume and protein leakage, which place chronic mechanical stress on the zonular fibers. These fibers often become stretched, brittle, or completely dehisced.

Surgical Management of Zonular Instability

But in this case there is a further challenge: once the CTR goes in, it ends up disappearing!

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