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Postoperative Corneal Asphericity in Low, Moderate, and High Myopic Eyes After Transepithelial PRK Using a New Pulse Allocation
by
Hogden, John
, Lin, David T. C.
, Verma, Shwetabh
, Arba-Mosquera, Samuel
, Holland, Simon P.
in
Astigmatism
/ Cataracts
/ Contact lenses
/ Cornea
/ Diabetic retinopathy
/ Eye surgery
/ Lasers
/ Postoperative period
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Topography
2017
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Postoperative Corneal Asphericity in Low, Moderate, and High Myopic Eyes After Transepithelial PRK Using a New Pulse Allocation
by
Hogden, John
, Lin, David T. C.
, Verma, Shwetabh
, Arba-Mosquera, Samuel
, Holland, Simon P.
in
Astigmatism
/ Cataracts
/ Contact lenses
/ Cornea
/ Diabetic retinopathy
/ Eye surgery
/ Lasers
/ Postoperative period
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Topography
2017
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Postoperative Corneal Asphericity in Low, Moderate, and High Myopic Eyes After Transepithelial PRK Using a New Pulse Allocation
by
Hogden, John
, Lin, David T. C.
, Verma, Shwetabh
, Arba-Mosquera, Samuel
, Holland, Simon P.
in
Astigmatism
/ Cataracts
/ Contact lenses
/ Cornea
/ Diabetic retinopathy
/ Eye surgery
/ Lasers
/ Postoperative period
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Topography
2017
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Postoperative Corneal Asphericity in Low, Moderate, and High Myopic Eyes After Transepithelial PRK Using a New Pulse Allocation
Journal Article
Postoperative Corneal Asphericity in Low, Moderate, and High Myopic Eyes After Transepithelial PRK Using a New Pulse Allocation
2017
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Overview
To evaluate the postoperative asphericity in low, moderate, and high myopic eyes after combined transepithelial photorefractive keratectomy and SmartSurf
treatment (SCHWIND eye-tech-solutions GmbH, Kleinostheim, Germany).
In this retrospective case series, the outcomes of myopic SmartSurf
were evaluated at 3 months postoperatively in 106 eyes and divided into low (less than -4.125 diopters [D]), moderate (-4.125 to -6.25 D), and high (more than -6.25 D) myopia groups. In all cases, standard examinations and preoperative and postoperative corneal topography (SCHWIND Sirius) were performed. The analysis comprised evaluating the change in asphericity versus planned correction, comparing expected and achieved postoperative asphericity for all eyes, and comparison of the three groups in terms of the preoperative and postoperatively expected and achieved asphericity. RESULTS At 3 months postoperatively, the low myopia group (n = 33) improved average negative asphericity (Q = -0.04 ± 0.17 preoperative vs -0.19 ± 0.20 postoperative, P < .05). The moderate myopia group (n = 35) maintained or slightly improved average negative asphericity (Q = -0.07 ± 0.14 preoperative vs -0.05 ± 0.24 postoperative, P = .35). For the high myopia group (n = 38), the eyes became more oblate compared to the preoperative status (Q = -0.09 ± 0.15 preoperative vs 0.62 ± 0.70 postoperative, P < .05). In terms of asphericity, the difference between the three groups was not statistically significant preoperatively (P > .10), but showed significant differences postoperatively (P < .007). The cohort's average preoperative corrected distance visual acuity was 0.01 ± 0.04 logMAR (range: 0.0 to 0.18 logMAR) and uncorrected distance visual acuity was 0.03 ± 0.08 logMAR (range: -0.12 to 0.40 logMAR) 3 months postoperatively.
SmartSurf
maintained or slightly improved preoperative corneal asphericity for low to moderate myopic corrections (up to -6.00 D). This may provide advantages in the quality of vision and the onset of presbyopic symptoms after laser refractive surgery in myopic patients. [J Refract Surg. 2017;33(12):820-826.].
Publisher
SLACK INCORPORATED
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