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Trifocal IOL Implantation in Eyes With Previous Laser Corneal Refractive Surgery: The Impact of Corneal Spherical Aberration on Postoperative Visual Outcomes. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the impact of trifocal intraocular lens implantation on visual outcomes in eyes previously treated with laser corneal refractive surgery, analyzing factors like corneal aberrations.
  • It included 222 eyes, classified as "failed" if there was a loss in corrected distance visual acuity (26.5% of the sample) or "successful" if there was no change or improvement (73.4%).
  • Results showed that eyes in the failed group experienced worse visual acuity and greater hyperopic error compared to the successful group, highlighting significant differences in corneal aberrations between the two groups.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To analyze corneal aberrations and factors affecting visual outcomes after implantation of a trifocal intraocular lens (IOL) in eyes previously treated with laser corneal refractive surgery.

Methods: This retrospective case series included 222 consecutive eyes implanted with the trifocal FineVision Micro-F IOL (PhysIOL) after laser corneal refractive surgery. The series was divided into two groups according to safety outcomes after lensectomy: eyes with loss of one or more lines of corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) [n = 59, 26.5%]) (failed eyes group) and eyes with no loss or gain in CDVA lines (n = 163, 73.4%]) (successful eyes group). Distribution of tomographic corneal aberrations (spherical aberration [Z], comatic and root mean square of higher order aberrations [RMS-HOA]), laser corneal refractive surgery error, kappa angle, and CDVA after laser corneal refractive surgery were compared among both groups.

Results: Mean CDVA after lensectomy was 0.15 ± 0.07 logMAR (range: 0.05 to 0.30 logMAR) versus 0.03 ± 0.04 logMAR (range: 0.00 to 0.15 logMAR) in the failed and successful eyes groups, respectively ( < .001). Comparison of both groups showed that failed eyes had a statistically significantly higher grade of hyperopic laser corneal refractive surgery than successful eyes measured as mean sphere (+0.71 ± 3.10 diopters [D] [range: -7.75 to +6.00 D] vs -0.46 ± 3.70 D [range: -10.75 to +6.00 D], < .01), spherical equivalent (+0.27 ± 3.10 D [range: -8.00 to +5.50 D] vs -0.97 ± 3.60 D [range: -12.50 to +4.90 D], < .05), and percentage of hyperopic laser corneal refractive surgery (64% vs 43.5%, < .05). Corneal aberration analysis showed that mean Z values were significantly more negative in the failed eyes group than in the successful eyes group (+0.07 ± 0.40 mm [range: -0.82 to +0.65 mm] vs +0.18 ± 0.37 mm [range: -0.79 to +0.87 mm], < .05). Laser corneal refractive surgery cylinder was distributed homogeneously between both groups, as well as coma and RMS-HOA, kappa angle, and CDVA after laser corneal refractive surgery that were not statistically significant.

Conclusions: Surgeons should consider tomographic corneal spherical aberration after implantation of a trifocal IOL in eyes after keratorefractive surgery, particularly in eyes previously treated with hyperopic laser corneal refractive surgery, to prevent loss of lines of visual acuity after lensectomy. .

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/1081597X-20220207-01DOI Listing

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