J Refract Surg
November 2006
Purpose: To evaluate the clinical results of wavefront-guided customized treatment of eyes that underwent previous keratorefractive surgery with clinically significant visual symptoms related to the presence of higher order aberrations, with or without defocus/astigmatism.
Methods: Twenty-eight consecutive eyes of 19 symptomatic patients underwent wavefront-guided custom photorefractive keratectomy (PRK with mitomycin C) to correct low and high order aberrations, using the LADAR-Vision platform. All eyes had manifest refractive spherical equivalent (MRSE) error from 0.
Purpose: To evaluate the reliability and ergonomics and to assess the first clinical results provided by the new LADAR 6000 excimer laser used to correct myopia and astigmatism, both by conventional and wavefront-guided ablation.
Methods: Seventy-four consecutive eyes from 37 patients underwent LASIK as the first field evaluation protocol of the Alcon LADAR 6000 excimer laser. Forty-six eyes were treated by wavefront-guided ablation to correct a manifest spheroequivalent refractive error (MSRE) of -0.
Purpose: To evaluate the early clinical results achieved with an algorithm adjusted for an expanded range of correction in wavefront-guided customized ablation with the LADARVision4000 (Alcon Laboratories Inc, Fort Worth, Tex).
Methods: Fifty-five consecutive eyes from 31 patients underwent wavefront-guided, customablation laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) (Hansatome and BD 4000 microkeratomes, LADARWave aberrometer, LADARVision4000 laser system). These were normal myopic and astigmatic eyes that had never been operated on.
J Refract Surg
January 2004
Purpose: To evaluate the clinical results of Alcon LADARVision4000 wavefront-guided customized treatment of eyes with myopia and/or astigmatism, and clinically significant visual symptoms related to the presence of higher order aberrations.
Methods: Seven consecutive abnormal eyes from seven patients underwent wavefront-guided CustomCornea (1 PRK, 6 enhancements after previous LASIK) to correct low and higher order aberrations, using the Alcon LADARVision4000 platform. Eyes were examined at 1 to 3 months after treatment; the longest follow-up examination was used for analysis.
Purpose: To evaluate the results of laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) performed to correct hyperopia, and hyperopic and mixed astigmatism using wider ablation diameters (optical zone diameter and overall ablation diameter) than those commonly used with the same and other lasers.
Methods: After flap creation using an Alcon SKBM microkeratome set for a 10-mm flap diameter, 53 eyes (33 patients) with a mean spheroequivalent attempted correction of +2.34 +/- 2.
Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy, safety, and predictability of therapeutic scraping and application of a diluted 0.02% mitomycin C solution to treat haze and regression after photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) for myopia.
Methods: We performed a non-comparative, non-randomized retrospective study of 35 eyes of 30 patients who had previously undergone PRK for myopia and developed haze and regression after treatment.
Purpose: To evaluate the results of the prophylactic use of mitomycin-C to inhibit haze formation after excimer laser photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) for medium and high myopia in eyes that were not good candidates for laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK).
Setting: Carones Ophthalmology Center, Milan, Italy.
Methods: This prospective randomized masked study comprised 60 consecutive eyes (60 patients).