5 results match your criteria: "Woori Eye Clinic[Affiliation]"
Clin Ophthalmol
November 2024
Woori Eye Clinic, Affiliated Clinical Professor to Department of Ophthalmology, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Daejon, 35229, Republic of Korea.
Purpose: This retrospective case control study report includes 4 eyes of 4 patients (aged from 37 to 44 years) with keratoconus suspect (KCS) who underwent laser epithelial keratomileusis linked laser asymmetric keratectomy (L-LAK) as corneal remodeling technique in order to avoid postoperative corneal ectasia.
Patients And Methods: Four eyes of 4 patients showed corneal topography findings with abnormal localized steep keratometric curvature greater than 47.0 D and peripheral corneal thickness asymmetry (Total corneal central thickness deviations in four directions on Orbscan map (SUM)≥80 µm).
J Clin Med
August 2024
Woori Eye Clinic, Affiliated to the Department of Ophthalmology, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Daejeon 35229, Republic of Korea.
: To identify the effect of alternating monocular instillation (AMI) of 0.125% atropine in Korean children with progressive myopia. : This retrospective single-center study included 120 children with progressive myopia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Ophthalmol
April 2021
Woori Eye Clinic, Department of Ophthalmology, Yonsei University School of Medicine, Daejon, South Korea.
Purpose: We aimed to introduce a new technique to reduce regional asymmetry of corneal thickness by assessing its effectiveness in four patients with myopic regression after laser refractive surgery (LRS).
Patients And Methods: Four patients (four eyes) with myopic regression after LRS were included in this study. A new technique of enhancement with laser epithelial keratomileusis-linked laser asymmetric keratectomy using semi-cylindrical ablation pattern (E-LAK-SCAP) with full integration of the Vision-Up software for analyzing the corneal thickness deviation can be used to create central symmetry by blocking laser ablation on the thin cornea.
Medicine (Baltimore)
April 2021
Woori Eye Clinic, Seo-Ku Daejon, Republic of Korea.
To compare and analyze the postoperative 1-year outcomes of laser refractive surgery (LRS) alone vs LRS with laser asymmetric keratectomy (LAK), in patients with myopia, for preventing and resolving LRS complications.This retrospective study compared the preoperative and 1-year postoperative outcomes between the control and comparison groups using a sum of deviations in corneal thickness in 4 directions >80 μm. The control group included 41 patients with myopia (41 eyes) who underwent LRS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study compared one-year postoperative outcomes of laser refractive surgery combined with laser asymmetric keratectomy (LAK) and laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK)for myopia correction in middle-aged patients (aged 40-49 years) with a total corneal thickness deviation (summed across four directions) ≥ 80 microns. The control group (n = 26; 52 eyes) underwent LASIK; the comparison group (n = 26; 52 eyes) underwent combined laser refractive surgery and LAK. Age, spherical equivalence, uncorrected visual acuity (near and far), corneal irregularity on the Orbscan map, sum of corneal thickness deviations in four directions, corneal thickness distribution, distance between the maximum posterior elevation (best-fit sphere; BFS) and visual axis, and postoperative blurring scores were analysed retrospectively between the groups.
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