BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The purpose of this prospective clinical cross-sectional study was to analyse indications, intraoperative, perioperative and postoperative pecularities and complications as well as postoperative functional and morphologic results of the first 1000 consecutive elective round laser keratoplasties. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The age of the 480 females and 520 males (362 x keratoconus), who had been operated on between 07/1989 and 04/2002 ranged from 20 to 92 years (mean 55+/-19). A total of 6 microsurgeons performed 718 x PK only, 222 x a triple procedure and 60 x additional IOL manoeuvres. Recipient and donor trephinations were accomplished with an 193 nm excimer laser (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Jena, Germany) from the epithelial side. RESULTS: In 895 eyes with perioperative corneal erosion, epithelial healing took not more than 3 days in half of cases. During a follow-up period of 1.9+/-1.5 years, in 35 eyes episodes of acute diffuse (8 irreversible) and in 12 eyes episodes of chronic focal (5 irreversible) endothelial immunologic graft reactions (4.7%) occurred between 6 weeks and 4.7 years after PK. Before/after suture removal, median values of astigmatism were 1.5 diopters (D)/2.5 D refractive, 3.0 D/3.3 D keratometric, and 4.0 D/4.2 D topographic. Best-corrected visual acuity was 0.50/0.60, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: More than 12 years of experience with this new technique indicate that besides optical advantages, nonmechanical trephination does not cause intraoperative or postoperative disadvantages for the patient. Under standardised surgical conditions a massive increase of astigmatism after suture removal seems to be avoidable with laser trephination in most cases due to reduction of decentration,"vertical tilt" and especially "horizontal torsion".
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The purpose of this prospective clinical cross-sectional study was to analyse indications, intraoperative, perioperative and postoperative pecularities and complications as well as postoperative functional and morphologic results of the first 1000 consecutive elective round laser keratoplasties. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The age of the 480 females and 520 males (362 x keratoconus), who had been operated on between 07/1989 and 04/2002 ranged from 20 to 92 years (mean 55+/-19). A total of 6 microsurgeons performed 718 x PK only, 222 x a triple procedure and 60 x additional IOL manoeuvres. Recipient and donor trephinations were accomplished with an 193 nm excimer laser (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Jena, Germany) from the epithelial side. RESULTS: In 895 eyes with perioperative corneal erosion, epithelial healing took not more than 3 days in half of cases. During a follow-up period of 1.9+/-1.5 years, in 35 eyes episodes of acute diffuse (8 irreversible) and in 12 eyes episodes of chronic focal (5 irreversible) endothelial immunologic graft reactions (4.7%) occurred between 6 weeks and 4.7 years after PK. Before/after suture removal, median values of astigmatism were 1.5 diopters (D)/2.5 D refractive, 3.0 D/3.3 D keratometric, and 4.0 D/4.2 D topographic. Best-corrected visual acuity was 0.50/0.60, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: More than 12 years of experience with this new technique indicate that besides optical advantages, nonmechanical trephination does not cause intraoperative or postoperative disadvantages for the patient. Under standardised surgical conditions a massive increase of astigmatism after suture removal seems to be avoidable with laser trephination in most cases due to reduction of decentration,"vertical tilt" and especially "horizontal torsion".
Authors: A Behrens; M Küchle; B Seitz; A Langenbucher; M M Kus; T Amann; U Schlötzer-Schrehardt; C Rummelt; G O Naumann Journal: Arch Ophthalmol Date: 1998-10
Authors: Sujata Das; Achim Langenbucher; Christina Jacobi; Nhung X Nguyen; Friedrich E Kruse; Gottfried O H Naumann; Berthold Seitz Journal: Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol Date: 2006-01-14 Impact factor: 3.117
Authors: S J Linke; L Ren; A Frings; J Steinberg; W Wöllmer; T Katz; R Reimer; N O Hansen; N Jowett; G Richard; R J Dwayne Miller Journal: Ophthalmologe Date: 2014-06 Impact factor: 1.059