| Literature DB >> 27482824 |
Maolong Tang, Yan Li, Winston Chamberlain, Derek J Louie, Julie M Schallhorn, David Huang.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To differentiate between keratoconus and contact lens-related corneal warpage by combining focal change patterns in anterior corneal topography, pachymetry, and epithelial thickness maps.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27482824 PMCID: PMC4978086 DOI: 10.1167/iovs.15-18938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci ISSN: 0146-0404 Impact factor: 4.799
Focal Changes That Differentiate Keratoconus From Warpage on Corneal Maps
Figure 1Contact lens-related warpage (top) and keratoconus (bottom) are not distinguishable by anterior topography (i.e., mean power map) when both show inferior focal steepening. They can be differentiated by the OCT epithelial map, which shows matching focal thickening in warpage and thinning in keratoconus. The pachymetry map shows focal thinning in keratoconus, but not in warpage. The warpage map is the product of the PD maps of anterior topography and epithelial thickness. The warpage map is predominantly positive (red/yellow) for the warpage case (top) and predominantly negative (blue/green) for the keratoconus case (bottom). The ectasia map is the product of fitted Gaussian waveforms for the PD maps of anterior topography and pachymetry. It shows clear cone-like pattern in keratoconus, which is absent in warpage.
Comparison of Group Averages Among Normal, Keratoconus, Warpage, and FFK
Figure 2The Anterior Ectasia Index and Warpage Index can be used to differentiate warpage from keratoconus for eyes with abnormal epithelial PSD values. The pink area denotes keratoconus, while the blue area denotes warpage. The purple area indicates both conditions coexist.
Figure 3A keratoconus case that also shows signs of contact-lens related warpage.
Figure 4Proposed approach for comprehensive keratoconus and warpage diagnosis in a clinical setting.