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1.
Br J Ophthalmol ; 106(6): 795-801, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33504489

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate the accuracy of intraocular lens (IOL) power calculation in a patient cohort with short axial eye length to assess the performance of IOL power calculation schemes in strong hyperopes. METHODOLOGY: The study was a single centre, single surgeon retrospective consecutive case series at the Augen- und Laserklinik, Castrop-Rauxel, Germany. Inclusion of patients after uneventful cataract surgery implanting either spherical (SA60AT) or aspheric (ZCB00) IOLs. Inclusion criteria were axial eye length <21.5 mm and/or emmetropising IOL power >28.5 D. Lens constants were optimised on a separate patient cohort considering the full bandwidth of axial eye length. Data of one single eye per patient were randomly included. The outcome measures were: mean absolute prediction error (MAE), median absolute prediction error, mean prediction error with SD and median prediction error and the percentage of eyes with an MAE within 0.25 D, 0.5 D, 0.75 D and 1.0 D. RESULTS: A total of 150 eyes from 150 patients were assessed. Okulix, PEARL-DGS, Kane and Castrop provided a statistically significantly smaller MAE compared with the Hoffer Q and SRK/T formulae. CONCLUSION: In our patient cohort with short axial eye length, the use of PEARL-DGS, Okulix, Kane or Castrop formulae showed the lowest MAE. The Castrop formula has not been published before, but will be disclosed with a ready-to-use Excel sheet as an addendum to this paper.


Subject(s)
Hyperopia , Lenses, Intraocular , Phacoemulsification , Axial Length, Eye , Biometry , Humans , Hyperopia/surgery , Lens Implantation, Intraocular , Optics and Photonics , Refraction, Ocular , Retrospective Studies
2.
Acta Ophthalmol ; 99(8): e1297-e1306, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33629542

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Validating a new nomogram for low to moderate astigmatism (0.75 D to 2.5 D) correction with epithelium- and Bowman-penetrating femtosecond laser-assisted arcuate incisions. METHODOLOGY: Prospective, interventional case series at the Augen- und Laserklinik, Castrop-Rauxel, Germany. Cataract patients with low to moderate corneal astigmatism were treated with femtosecond laser-assisted arcuate incisions. Patients with previous refractive corneal treatment were excluded. Outcome assessment was based on manifest refraction, astigmatic vector analysis and visual acuity. RESULTS: The study analysed 43 eyes of 33 patients after three months and 35 eyes of 27 patients after 12 months. After 12 months, 100% of all eyes treated had ≤1.0 D and 97% ≤0.5 D of subjective residual astigmatism. Mean residual astigmatism was 0.27 D. 90% of all eyes were within one line of difference between UDVA and CDVA. SEQ Mean Absolute Error was 0.26 D and SEQ. Mean error was -0.08 ± 0.32 D. CI was 0.98 ± 0.2 D, and Index of Success, 0.20 ± 0.18 D. CONCLUSION: The Castrop nomogram showed results that are comparable to or better than results presented in the literature for existing nomograms. Our results for astigmatic reduction are comparable to published results for TIOL implantation. It seems to be a predictable and safe measure to reduce manifest astigmatism.


Subject(s)
Astigmatism/surgery , Corneal Stroma/surgery , Corneal Surgery, Laser/standards , Nomograms , Refraction, Ocular/physiology , Visual Acuity , Aged , Astigmatism/diagnosis , Astigmatism/physiopathology , Corneal Stroma/pathology , Corneal Surgery, Laser/methods , Corneal Topography/methods , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Prospective Studies , Time Factors
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