| Literature DB >> 35204325 |
Otilia-Maria Dumitrescu1, Sinziana Istrate2,3, Mioara-Laura Macovei1,3, Alina Gabriela Gheorghe3.
Abstract
Assessing the intraocular pressure is a difficult but crucial task in the follow-up of patients that have undergone penetrating keratoplasty. Early recognition of elevated intraocular pressure and/or glaucoma and establishment of the appropriate treatment is essential to ensure the best possible visual outcome for patients dealing with this feared complication. Although Goldmann applanation tonometry is still the gold standard for measuring the intraocular pressure, its limitations in postkeratoplasty eyes, due to postoperative modified corneal morphology, have led to the search for more suitable alternatives. This review is the result of a comprehensive literature search in the MEDLINE database that aims to present glaucoma in the context of perforating keratoplasty, the corneal properties with impact on ocular pressure measurement, and the results achieved with the most important tonometers that have been studied in this pathology. Goldmann applanation tonometry remains the reference for intraocular pressure assessment even in corneas after penetrating keratoplasty. However, some promising alternatives have emerged, the most important of which are the Pascal dynamic contour tonometry, the Tono-Pen XL, the ocular response analyzer, and the iCare. All have advantages and disadvantages but have proved to be appropriate alternatives, especially in cases in which Goldmann applanation tonometry cannot be used.Entities:
Keywords: Goldmann applanation tonometry; Pascal dynamic contour tonometry; Tono-Pen XL; glaucoma; iCare; intraocular pressure; ocular response analyzer; penetrating keratoplasty
Year: 2022 PMID: 35204325 PMCID: PMC8870783 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12020234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Central corneal thickness after PK.
| Study | CCT (Mean ± SD; µm) | Range (µm) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fabian et al. [ | 585.92 ± 86.18 | 470–796 | |
| Chou et al. [ | 585.0 ±149.0 | N/A | |
| Papastergiou et al. [ | 549.0 ±27.7 | 503–608 | PK performed for ectatic disorders |
| Papastergiou et al. [ | 536.0 ±45.3 | 475–622 | PK performed for non-ectatic disorders |
| Magalhaes et al. [ | 576.3 ± 65.5 | N/A | |
| Ozbek et al. [ | 482.3 ± 75.1 | N/A | Grafts with edema and scars excluded |
| Salvetat et al. [ | 569.2 ± 50.4 | 478–698 | |
| Shemesh et al. [ | 593.0 ± 94.0 | 441–804 | |
| Ismail et al. [ | 525.0 ± 101.0 | 473–804 | |
| Meyenberg et al. [ | 549.6 ± 33.5 | 393–679 |
CCT—central corneal thickness; SD—standard deviation; N/A—not applicable.
Mean difference between PDCT and GAT measurements in post-PK eyes.
| Study | Mean PDCT-GAT Difference (mm Hg) |
|---|---|
| Kandarakis et al. [ | +1.5 |
| Chou et al. [ | +2.12 |
| Ismail et al. [ | +2.67 |
| Meyenberg et al. [ | +3.1 |
| Ceruti et al. [ | +2.5 |
PDCT—Pascal dynamic contour tonometry, GAT—Goldmann applanation tonometry, PK—penetrating keratoplasty.