refractive stability - usually 1-3 months after operation - the lower the correction, the sooner...

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Page 1: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 2: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Enhancement-Retreatment

F.FAZELFeiz Hospital

Page 3: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Refractive stability

• - Usually 1-3 months after operation• - The lower the correction, the sooner • refraction will be stable• myopia < -3 D : 1 month• myopia 3-6 D : 2 months• myopia > -6 D : 3 months

Page 4: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Why Retreatment ?

• - Residual refractive error.

• - Complications of primary operation.

Page 5: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Residual refractive error

• - Under or Over correction(occures in the immediate postoperative period).

• - Regression(occures during the first 3 to 6 months after surgery may continue up to 1 year) .

Page 6: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Undercorrection

• If an eye was treated by LASIK for -8 D and on day 1, through to 1 week, 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year, the eye was found to be stable at -1 D, this would be defined as a primary undercorrection.

• Causes:Corneal and Non-Corneal .

Page 7: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Non-Corneal causes

• Inaccurate preoperative refraction.• Inadequate laser energy delivery (eg, excess

bed hydration, room humidity, inappropriate laser energy calibration, laser head energy instability).

Page 8: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Corneal causes

• Cases where the biomechanics of the cornea change due to the keratectomy and a stable but unpredicted curvature change is obtained. For example, this can happen if the residual stromal thickness was much less than 250 microns but not thin enough to cause long-term destabilization (ectasia).

Page 9: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Regression • regression is defined narrowly to the

observation of a shift in refraction postoperatively that tends to reverse the intended effect.

• excluding the situation where the refraction does not stabilize and continues to change due to plastic deformity of the cornea-a process known as keratectasia

Page 10: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Regression

• myopic eye, undergoing LASIK for -4 D, that was found to be plano on postoperative day 1,-0.25 at 1 month, -0.75 at 3 months, 6 months, and-1.25 at 1 year and became stable.

Page 11: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Regression

• Is it because the epithelium thickened in the center(CEH)?

• Is it because the flap was too thick, and there was bowing of the central cornea forward?

• It is because stromal synthesis(wound healing)?

• Axial length change?• Nuclear sclerosis?

Page 12: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Regression in under corrected eye

• An eye with 5 diopter myopia treated by PRK had been -0.75 D at postoperative day 1, -1.50 D at 1 month, -1.75 D at 3 months, but then stable through to 1 year, then the eye would have been said to have had a primary undercorrection of -0.75 D followed by regression from -0.75 to -1.75 D

Page 13: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Pre-op evaluation

• - Visual acuity• - CSF and Glare testing• - Refraction• - Schirmer test• - Corneal imaging ( Topo, Orbscan, Pentacam, • Artemis )• - Abberometry• - Residual stromal thickness• - Specular microscopy

Page 14: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Visual acuity

• - Does UCVA matches refraction ?( 1 line drop for each 0.25 D )

• - Is there significant difference between UCVA and BCVA ? ( At least 2 line difference )

Page 15: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Corneal imaging

• - Using Topo, Orbscan, Pentacam, • Artemis, etc, KCN should be seriously ruled

out.• - Decentered ablation can be seen in Topo• and Orbscan • Posterior corneal elevation

Page 16: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 17: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 18: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 19: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 20: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 21: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 22: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 23: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Schirmer test

• - In cases with severe dry eye, there is higher risk of regression after enhancement

Page 24: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Refraction

• - Stability of refraction ( < 0.25 D change in two months )• - Retinoscopic and Autorefraction

Page 25: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Residual stromal thickness'(RST)

• Indirect : Pachymetry, Orbscan(not reliable)• RST = central thickness – estimated flap

thickness.• Direct : OCT , Artemis, Confocal• Intra-operative pachymetry.

Page 26: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia
Page 27: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Ideal RST

• - At least 250 mic or ideally 300 mic• - More than 50% of total pachymetry• - Total post-op pachymetry > 400µ

Page 28: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Reoperation

• Rate between 5% -30%.• Lasik• ASA

Page 29: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Re-operation( LASIK)

• - Flap creation

• - Stromal ablation

Page 30: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Flap creation

• - Lifting the original flap

• - Recut the original flap

Page 31: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Flap lifting

• - Usually possible 6-12 months post-op

• - More difficult in cases with :• a) aggressive wound healing• b) Prolonged time between primary operation and

flap lifting• c) Vicinity of flap edge to limbus• d) Fibrosis in interface

Page 32: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Flap recut

• - Conventional microkeratome

• - Femtosec. Laser

Page 33: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Advanced Surface Ablation

• Smoothing• Non-Smoothing• Transepithelial• On lasik flap

Page 34: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Smoothing PRK

• while retreatment of PRK improved the refractive results, there remained two major problems: the scatter of refractive results, and the loss of BSCVA, which was often associated with haze. Both of these parameters were improved in the smoothing vs. the nonsmoothing groups.

Page 35: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Smoothing PRK.• The “smoothing” technique, developed by Dr. Julian Stevens,

consisted of soaking the cornea with normal saline solution, waiting 30 seconds for stromal hydration, after which a 5 um PTK was applied in short bursts.

• For the smoothing group, 81% of the intended refraction by retreatment was achieved, compared to 48% in the non-smoothing group, a difference that was significantly significant. Also, no patients in the smoothing group lost 2 or more lines of BSCVA, compared to 8% of patients in the non-smoothing group.

• UCVA was better, and haze less, in the smoothing vs. the nonsmoothing group.

Page 36: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Transepithelial customized PRK

• The technique is a “no touch” modification of conventional PRK in which the epithelium is removed by laser rather than manually.

• When performing a second treatment, epithelial removal is often a problem and manual approaches might be inaccurate and traumatic.

Page 37: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Contraindication of Enhancement

• Refractive instability.• Suboptimal pachymetry(total pachymetry

<400 and RST<300)• Suboptimal posterior corneal elevation(>40µm

reveal ectasia even if anterior elevation and power appear normal).

Page 38: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Retreatment • Prior to re-treatment the surgeon must be sure that regression has

stabilized and is not due to progressive ectasia.• Flap lifting with ablation or surface ablation may be considered to

correct postoperative refractive error after either PRK or LASIK. Topical steroids and mitomycin C (MMC) may be useful to mitigate haze formation.

• Intrastromal pachymetry is very helpful for subsequent decisions regarding re-treatment to reduce the risk of postoperative ectasia .

• Patients having custom LASIK may achieve better vision that those having conventional (noncustom) LASIK. However, there is mixed evidence on the safety of wavefront guided re-treatments.

Page 39: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Effects of Antiglaucoma Drugs in Eyes with Myopic Regression

• The preliminary data show that antiglaucoma drugs are effective for the reduction of the refractive regression, especially of the spherical errors, after LASIK. It is suggested that backward movement of the cornea may occur, possibly flattening the corneal curvature by lowering the IOP. Reduction of the IOP may contribute to improving regression after keratorefractive surgery.

Page 40: Refractive stability - Usually 1-3 months after operation - The lower the correction, the sooner refraction will be stable myopia < -3 D : 1 month myopia

Thanks for your attention