| Literature DB >> 33229647 |
Mohamed Ibrahime Asif1, Rahul Kumar Bafna1, Jodhbir Singh Mehta2, Jagadesh Reddy3, Jeewan Singh Titiyal1, Prafulla K Maharana1, Namrata Sharma1.
Abstract
The procedure of small incision lenticule extraction (SMILE) was introduced in 2011, and since then there has been an increase in the number of cases undergoing this procedure worldwide. The surgery has a learning curve and may be associated with problems in the intraoperative and postoperative periods. The intraoperative problems during SMILE surgery include the loss of suction, the occurrence of altered or irregular opaque bubble layer and black spots, difficulty in lenticular dissection and extraction, cap perforation, incision-related problems, and decentered ablation. Most of the postoperative problems are similar as in other laser refractive procedures, but with decreased incidence. The identification of risk factors, clinical features, and management of complications of SMILE help to obtain optimum refractive outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Opaque bubble layer; SMILE; SMILE complications; refractive surgery; retained lenticule; small incision lenticule extraction; suction loss
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33229647 PMCID: PMC7856979 DOI: 10.4103/ijo.IJO_3258_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Ophthalmol ISSN: 0301-4738 Impact factor: 1.848
Figure 1Flowchart of intraoperative complications of SMILE
Figure 2(a) Black spots (yellow arrow) with pseudo suction due to conjunctiva entrapment (black arrow) between the suction cup and cornea (b) OBL (blue arrow) and subconjunctival hemorrhage (green arrow) (c) Black island (red arrow) with cotton fiber between cornea and suction cup (d) Incisional tear (white arrow) (e) Tractional striae (orange arrow) formed in the attempt of pulling adherent lenticule during extraction (f) Decentered coaxial light reflex imaged in infrared mode (green arrow)
Different signs described for identification of the plane of the lenticule during SMILE surgery
| Sign | Described by | Time of visualization | Details | Description | Implication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White Ring Sign | Jacob | During dissection of both posterior and anterior planes, the position of the white ring changes | Light reflex from the lenticule side cut is seen in darker iris under oblique illumination | Seen as a white ring posterior to the dissecting instrument during anterior plane dissection and anterior to the instrument during posterior plane dissection | Prevention and detection of unintentional initial posterior plane dissection, thereby preventing lenticule cap adhesions |
| Shimmer Sign | Shetty | Visible during dissection of the posterior plane | A distinct shining reflection is seen around the instrument as it enters the posterior plane and extends through the length of the instrument as it advances further | Seen as a bright reflex around the dissecting instrument. Not visible during dissection of the anterior plane | Helps in identifying the correct plane of dissection |
| Meniscus Sign | Titiyal | During delineation of the posterior lamellar plane. | Pushing the lenticule edge away from the surgeon creates a gap between the inner diameter of the cut and the lenticule edge. | Seen as a meniscus shaped gap between the inner cut and the lenticular edge | Provides for easy identification of lenticule edge. Prevents cap lenticular adhesion. |
| Stop Sign | Sachdev | After delineation of the anterior plane in the right half and posterior plane in the left half | Point of resistance noted at the junction between dissected and undissected halves of both anterior and posterior planes | Subsequent lateral movement of the instrument is difficult (left to right in the posterior plane and right to left in the anterior plane). | Confirms ideal delineation of both planes |
Figure 3Flowchart of postoperative complications of SMILE
Various studies depicting the effect of cyclotorsion correction on the refractive outcomes after SMILE
| Author; Year | Study | Purpose | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kose | Retrospective | To evaluate the effect of cyclotorsion compensation with an image-guided system (Callisto) on the visual and refractive outcomes after SMILE | Mean astigmatic error in the cyclotorsion compensated group was significantly lower than the standard group. The combination of the Callisto eye system with a VisuMax laser might be an efficacious and reliable approach to enhance astigmatism treatment |
| Chen | Prospective | To evaluate the add-on effect of manual cyclotorsion error correction by the cornea-marking method over standard SMILE | SMILE surgery combined with cyclotorsion error compensation yielded a significant improvement in surgical outcomes regarding safety, efficiency, and predictability for patients with astigmatism. |
| Xu | Prospective, double-blinded, RCT which included patients who underwent SMILE. Two eyes of a single patient were randomly divided into the static cyclotorsion compensation (SCC) group and the control group | To compare the clinical outcomes of SMILE with or without cyclotorsion | The ocular rotation in SMILE surgery using a well-controlled position was too small to affect the astigmatic outcomes or postoperative visual quality |
| Ganesh | Prospective | To study the safety, efficacy, and outcomes of manual cyclotorsion compensation in SMILE for myopic astigmatism. | Manual compensation may be a safe, feasible, and effective approach to refine the results of astigmatism with a SMILE, especially in higher degrees of cylinders. |
RCT- randomized control trial; SMILE- small incision lenticule extraction
Summary of a various meta-analysis published on complications of SMILE
| Study; year | Inclusion | Purpose | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| He | Five studies involving 245 patients (363 eyes; 189 eyes in the FS-LASIK group and 174 eyes in the SMILE group) were included in the meta-analysis | To evaluate central corneal sensitivity after SMILE versus LASIK for myopia | Central corneal sensitivity exhibited a small decrease and a faster recovery after the SMILE procedure compared to FS-LASIK during the first three postoperative months. Corneal sensitivity after SMILE and FS-LASIK was similar at 6 months after surgery. |
| Zhang | Eleven studies from a review of 102 articles, involving a total of 1,101 eyes, of which 532 eyes (48.32%) underwent SMILE and 569 eyes (51.68%) underwent FS-LASIK | Systematic review and meta-analysis to assess possible differences in clinical outcomes | SMILE and FS-LASIK were comparable in terms of both safety and efficacy. SMILE may create fewer dry eye symptoms than FS-LASIK. Corneal sensitivity was greater after SMILE than FS-LASIK. |
| Shen | Five cohorts and one RCT were identified for comparing dry eye after SMILE (291 eyes) and FS-LASIK (277 eyes) | To compare postoperative dry eye between SMILE and LASIK | Dry eye after both SMILE and FS-LASIK usually occurs transiently. SMILE does not show obvious superiority over FS-LASIK by exhibiting similar and acceptable objective parameters, and SMILE may have milder subjective symptoms. |
| Kobashi | This included 5 prospective comparative studies | To compare postoperative ocular surface integrity and innervation between SMILE and LASIK | SMILE procedure has fewer negative impacts on the ocular surface and corneal innervation than does FS-LASIK. Furthermore, SMILE shows superiority over FS-LASIK by exhibiting a lower risk of postoperative dry eye |
| Wen | Forty-eight RCT was identified | To compare the postoperative efficacy, predictability, safety, and visual quality of all major forms of laser corneal refractive surgeries for correcting myopia (FS-LASIK, LASIK, SMILE, FLEx, PRK, LASEK, Epi LASIK, T-PRK) | This network meta-analysis shows that there were no statistically significant differences in either visual outcomes (efficacy and safety) or visual quality (HOAs and CS). FS-LASIK behaved better in predictability than any other type of surgery. |
| Guo | Twenty-two studies were included: 5 randomized controlled trials (RCTs), 9 prospective and 6 retrospective cohort studies, and 2 cross-sectional studies | To compare the postoperative corneal biomechanical properties between small incision lenticule extraction (SMILE) and other corneal refractive surgeries | In terms of preserving corneal biomechanical strength after surgeries, SMILE was superior to either FS-LASIK or LASIK, while comparable to FLEX or PRK/LASEK group based on the results from ORA. Corvis ST summary score post SMILE was comparable to FS-LASIK, but more studies need to apply Corvis ST on evaluation. |
CS- Contrast sensitivity; FS-LASIK- Femtosecond laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis; FLEx-; HOA- Higher-order aberration; LASEK-; LASIK- Laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis; PRK- Photorefractive keratectomy; SMILE- small incision lenticule extraction; T-PRK- Topography-guided photorefractive keratectomy