Literature DB >> 26218110

Visual Acuity, Quality of Life and Visual Function Outcomes after Cataract Surgery in Bali.

Lachlan Farmer1, Cecilia Innes-Wong, Caroline Bergman-Hart, Robert J Casson, John Crompton.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To assess post-cataract surgery intermediate-term (>6 months) data of visual acuity (VA), surgical complications, refractive outcomes, quality of life (QOL) and visual function (VF) from a non-governmental organization program in Indonesia.
METHODS: Retrospective cohort study design. Participants were a selection of patients who underwent cataract surgery by the John Fawcett Foundation between 2006 and 2011, with at least 6 months follow-up. Patients underwent comprehensive ophthalmic examinations. QOL and VF questionnaires were administered.
RESULTS: From a total of 1557 invited to attend, 547 patients participated; 99.8% of eyes had presenting VA <6/60. At day 1 postoperatively, 52.1% of patients had a good outcome by World Health Organization criteria (unaided VA ≥ 6/18). Six months or later postoperatively, 85% of eyes had best-corrected VA ≥ 6/18 and 5.6% of eyes had best-corrected VA < 3/60. At final follow-up, mean postoperative spherical equivalent refraction was -2.35 diopters (standard deviation 1.75, n = 542). On a scale of 1-100, median converted values for QOL were 25.0 preoperatively and 74.0 postoperatively, a statistically significant improvement (p < 0.001). Of eyes with VA better than 3/60 on postoperative day 1, 5.7% (95% confidence interval 3.6-7.9%) became blind (VA < 3/60) at the 6-month or later time point.
CONCLUSION: Cataract surgery in this population markedly improved QOL, despite a trend towards myopic refractive outcomes. These findings raise questions about biometric methodology, intraocular lens power calculations and refractive targets. Postoperative day 1 VA data may be a reasonable proxy of the intermediate-term rate of non-blind eyes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cataract; Indonesia; quality of life; visual function and epidemiology

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26218110     DOI: 10.3109/09286586.2015.1008104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ophthalmic Epidemiol        ISSN: 0928-6586            Impact factor:   1.648


  1 in total

1.  Evaluation of postoperative refractive error correction after cataract surgery.

Authors:  Ellen Konadu Antwi-Adjei; Emmanuel Owusu; Emmanuel Kobia-Acquah; Emmanuella Esi Dadzie; Emmanuel Anarfi; Seth Wanye
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-06-17       Impact factor: 3.240

  1 in total

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