| Literature DB >> 6350969 |
M B McDonald, S B Koenig, A Safir, M H Friedlander, H E Kaufman, N Granet.
Abstract
Sixty-five epikeratophakia procedures have been performed in 63 patients; visual acuity data have been tabulated on 31 patients with 4 to 30 months follow-up. Patients with more than a year of follow-up showed stable keratometry readings. Early patients achieved 70% of the predicted dioptric correction; more recent patients have achieved 87% with improvements in the lathing procedure, tissue handling, and surgical technique. Visual acuities improve with time. At any given time after surgery, acuities measured with a hard contact lens are better than those measured with spectacles; the decrease in spectacle acuity is probably a result of irregular refraction at the graft surface. The gap between contact lens and spectacle acuity decreases with time. A number of patients achieve postoperative visual acuities better than their preoperative acuities, and most achieve final spectacle acuities within a line or two of their preoperative acuities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1983 PMID: 6350969 DOI: 10.1016/s0161-6420(83)34516-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmology ISSN: 0161-6420 Impact factor: 12.079