160 research outputs found

    White ring sign for uneventful lenticule separation in small-incision lenticule extraction

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    We describe the white ring sign, which differentiates the posterior and anterior lenticular planes in small-incision lenticule extraction. The sign identifies the plane of dissection by the anteroposterior relationship between the dissecting instrument and the circular white light reflected from the lenticular side cut. Differentiating the planes enables the surgeon to dissect the anterior plane before the posterior plane, which facilitates smooth lenticule extraction and prevents complications such as cap tears, partial lenticule dissection, and a torn lenticule. Financial Disclosure None of the authors has a financial or proprietary interest in any material or method mentioned

    Stab Incision Glaucoma Surgery: A Modified Guarded Filtration Procedure for Primary Open Angle Glaucoma

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    Purpose. To describe a modified guarded filtration surgery, stab incision glaucoma surgery (SIGS), for primary open angle glaucoma (POAG). Methods. This prospective, interventional case series included patients with POAG (IOP ≥21 mmHg with glaucomatous visual field defects). After sliding superior conjunctiva down over limbus, 2.8 mm bevel-up keratome was used to create conjunctival entry and superficial corneoscleral tunnel in a single step starting 1.5 mm behind limbus. Lamellar corneoscleral tunnel was carefully dissected 0.5–1 mm into cornea and anterior chamber (AC) was entered. Kelly Descemet’s punch (1 mm) was slid along the tunnel into AC to punch internal lip of the tunnel, thereby compromising it. Patency of ostium was assessed by injecting fluid in AC and visualizing leakage from tunnel. Conjunctival incision alone was sutured. Results. Mean preoperative IOP was 27.41±5.54 mmHg and mean postoperative IOP was 16.47±4.81 mmHg (n=17). Mean reduction in IOP was 38.81±16.55%. There was significant reduction of IOP (p<0.000). 64.7% had IOP at final follow-up of <18 mmHg without medication and 82.35% had IOP <18 mmHg with ≤2 medications. No sight threatening complications were encountered. Conclusion. Satisfactory IOP control was noted after SIGS in interim follow-up (14.18±1.88 months)

    Customized corneal allogenic intrastromal ring segments (CAIRS) for keratoconus with decentered asymmetric cone

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    Corneal allogenic intrastromal ring segments (CAIRS) refer to the intracorneal placement of fresh, unprocessed, processed, preserved, or packaged allogenic rings/segments of any type/length. We described uniform-thickness CAIRS previously. We now describe a new technique of customized CAIRS to personalize the flattening effect as per individual topography. A prospective interventional case series of patients with pericentral/ paracentral decentered cones and gradation of keratometry with one side steeper than the other was conducted. Individually customized tapered CAIRS with variable volume, arc length, taper length, and gradient of taper were implanted. In total, 32 eyes of 29 patients with at least 1-year follow-up were included. Special double-bladed trephines and a CAIRS customizer template allowed the creation of individually customized CAIRS. Mean uncorrected distance visual acuity (UDVA) and spectacle-corrected distance visual acuity improved from 0.22 to 0.47 (P = 0.000) and from 0.76 to 0.89 (P = 0.001), respectively. Significant improvement was seen in K1, K2, Km, Kmax, topographic astigmatism, Q-value, sphere, cylinder, spherical equivalent, Root Mean Square (RMS), Higher Order Aberrations (HOA), and vertical coma (P &lt; 0.01, 0.05). There was no significant change in the width or height of CAIRS between 1 month and last visit on anterior-segment optical coherence tomography. Five eyes continued to remain at the same UDVA, 27 eyes had at least 2 lines, and 13 eyes had at least 3 or more lines improvement in UDVA. The maximum improvement in UDVA was 7 lines. A significant difference in flattening was obtained at different zones across the tapered CAIRS. Thus, differential flattening was achieved across the cone based on the customization plan. Personalized customization was possible for each cornea, unlike limited models of progressive-thickness synthetic segments. Allogenic nature, greater customizability, efficacy, and absent need for large inventories are advantages compared to synthetic segments

    Endoilluminator-assisted Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty and endoilluminator-assisted pre-Descemet endothelial keratoplasty

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    Soosan Jacob,1,2 Amar Agarwal,1 Dhivya Ashok Kumar1 1Dr Agarwal&rsquo;s Eye Hospital and Eye Research Centre, 2Dr&nbsp;Agarwal&rsquo;s Refractive and Cornea Foundation (DARCF), Chennai, IndiaWe read with great interest the article by Kobayashi et al on the use of endoillumination probe-assisted Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) for bullous keratopathy secondary to argon-laser iridotomy.1 We would like to bring to the author&rsquo;s notice that one of us (SJ) described the use of external endoillumination for DMEK, and the same was published under our names in 2014 as endoilluminator-assisted transcorneal illumination for DMEK,2 with study patients included from January 2013.&nbsp;&nbsp;Read the original article by Kobayashi et al&nbsp

    In Vivo Confocal Microscopy after Corneal Collagen Crosslinking

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    In vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM) findings of 84 patients who had undergone conventional epithelium-off corneal collagen crosslinking (CXL) and accelerated CXL (ACXL) were retrospectively reviewed. Analysis confirmed that despite a significant decrease in the mean density of anterior keratocytes in the first 6 postoperative months, cell density after CXL and ACXL returned to baseline values at 12 months. The demarcation lines observed after treatments represent an expression of light-scattering (reflectivity changes) through different tissue densities. Temporary haze of the anterior-mid stroma after conventional CXL represents an indirect sign of CXL-induced stromal collagen compaction and remodeling. IVCM showed that treatment penetration varies to some extent, but that the endothelium is not damaged and is correlated with CXL biomechanical effects. IVCM of limbal structures shows no evidence of pathological changes. Regeneration of subepithelial and stromal nerves was complete 12 months after the operation with fully restored corneal sensitivity and no neurodystrophic occurrences. IVCM allowed detailed high magnification in vivo micromorphological analysis of corneal layers, enabling the assessment of early and late corneal modifications induced by conventional and accelerated CXL. IVCM confirms that CXL is a safe procedure, which is still undergoing development and protocol adjustments

    Air-Pump-Assisted Pre-Descemet’s Endothelial Keratoplasty

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    Pre-Descemet’s Layer

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    Harvesting a PDEK Graft

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