24 research outputs found

    The Future Direction of Refractive Surgery

    No full text

    Overcorrected visual acuity improved by antiglaucoma medication after radial keratotomy

    No full text
    Case report of overcorrected visual acuity Improved by antiglaucoma edication after radial keratotom

    Intraocular Lens Removal During Penetrating Keratoplasty for Pseudophakic Bullous Keratopathy

    No full text
    Pseudophakic bullous keratopathy is now the most common reason for penetrating keratoplasty. In previous reports, the type of intraocular lens (IOL) most frequently encountered in these eyes was the iris plane IOL. The authors reviewed 27 cases of IOL removal during penetrating keratoplasty. Lenses were removed if they were dislocated or associated with iritis, recurrent hyphema, glaucoma, or persistent cystoid macular edema. The IOL encountered most often was the anterior chamber lens (in 22 eyes); closed thin loop, semiflexible or flexible anterior chamber lenses accounted for 19 of these. Iris plane lenses were removed from five eyes. No posterior chamber lenses were removed. Clear grafts were obtained in 24 of 27 cases (89%); visual acuity improved or remained the same in 24 cases, to 20/60 in 11 cases. The most common causes of poor postoperative vision were retinal disease (6/27 cases) and glaucoma (6/27 cases). The association between anterior chamber lenses and pseudophakic bullous keratopathy is probably the result of both the increase in use of these lenses and the documented propensity of the closed loop semiflexible anterior chamber lenses to cause complications. © 1987, American Academy of Ophthalmology, Inc. All rights reserved

    The Effect of Changes in intraocular Pressure on Corneal Curvature after Radial Keratotomy in the Rabbit Eye

    No full text
    Standard radial keratotomy was performed in both eyes of 18 rabbits. Intraocular pressure (IOP) was raised by injection of saline solution into the vitreous cavity at different times after surgery: 8 eyes at one, two, and six weeks and 12 eyes at four months. Keratometric readings at 10, 20, 40, 60, and 80 mmHg were recorded by three independent observers in a masked fasion. The same procedure was performed in eight eyes that had no surgery, as controls. Increments in IOP correlated with significant reductions in corneal power at all times after surgery and for all IOP values in the operated eyes. No changes were observed in the control eyes. The results indicate that variations in IOP, even within physiological limits, may cause changes in corneal curvature after radial keratotomy, and that patients with wide fluctuations in IOP could present a higher risk for postoperative fluctuation in visual acuity after this refractive procedure. © 1986, American Academy of Ophthalmology, Inc. All rights reserved

    Precarved lyophilized tissue for lamellar keratoplasty in recurrent pterygium

    No full text
    Thirteen eyes with recurrent pterygia were treated with excision and lamellar keratoplasty using precarved, lyophilized donor cornea. After an average follow-up of 23 months, only one eye (7.7%) required repeat excision. Two eyes (15.4%) had minor recurrences that were asymptomatic and did not progress. Minimal vascularization at the interface between donor and recipient cornea was frequent, but this completely regressed after suture removal and topical corticosteroid treatment. Limitation of movement, when present preoperatively, was improved or eliminated. Best corrected visual acuity was unchanged in eight eyes (61.5%), decreased by one line in two eyes (15.4%), and improved by one or two lines in three eyes (23.1%). Postoperative astigmatism was within 0.5 diopter of the preoperative value in 11 eyes (84.60; one eye (7.7%) had a postoperative increase of 1 diopter and another eye (7.7%) of 2 diopters. © 1986
    corecore