Title: REFRACTIVE SURGERY
1REFRACTIVE SURGERY the optometrist
RH/OPTOM/UKZN 2007
2- near sighted people have sought ways to get rid
of their glasses for centuries. Tradition says
that ancient Chinese (presumably myopic) slept
with sandbags on their eyes to flatten their
corneas
3- It is certain that Purkinje tried the same thing
in the 1820s with only temporary improvement of
his 5D of myopia. - In the mid 1800s, Dr J Ball advertised a small
mallet mounted on a spring in a eye cup that
struck the cornea through the closed eyelid,
pounding it flat. It restores your eyesight and
renders your spectacles useless he claimed.
4 5INEFFECTUAL??
- CERTAINLY!!!
- BUT NOT ALL SUCH NOTIONS WERE EITHER RIDICULOUS
OR INEFFECTUAL - THEY MAY JUST HAVE BEEN
UNTIMELY (Bores 1993)
6- McDonnell (1999) postulated that if we want to
have a feel for the way ophthalmology is going in
the next millennium, then we need look no further
than refractive surgery today
7WHY OPT FOR REFRACTIVE SURGERY??
- PREVIOUSLY
- vocation
- sport
- rx/C/L intolerance
- NOW
- cosmesis
- frustration with use of spex and C/L
- Improved unaided VA
8AIM OF REFRACTIVE SURGERY
- alter refr state of eye gt enable px to see
without visual aids - refr surgery divided into FOUR major areas
- 1. INCISIONAL TECHNIQUES
- 2. INTRAOCULAR LENSES
- 3. THERMAL TECHNIQUES
- 4. LAMELLAR PROCEDURES
9INCISIONAL TECHNIQUES(use of incisions)
- Eg. RADIAL KERATOTOMY (RK)
- Sato,1939, intro as solution to keratoconus
modified by Fyodorov - procedure involves radial cuts on epithelial side
of cornea to stroma - pattern spokes of a bicycle wheel
- between 4-16
- Extra-pupillary region
- principle incisions gt side of cornea to bulge
gt central corneal flattening gt reduction in
myopia (2-3D)
10INTRAOCULAR LENSES(use of implants)
- Eg. INTRASTROMAL CORNEAL RINGS
- makes use of intrastromal corneal ring segments
INTACS (PMMA)
11INTACS
- The ring segments flatten your cornea similarly
to the way you can flatten the top of a tent by
pushing on the sides.
12INTRASTROMAL RINGS cont..
- Segmentsgt flatten central cornea - adv no
removal of tissue - Initially indicated for low myopia (1-3D) and min
astig lt 1.00D - Nowgt Advocated for keratoconics
- adv reversible, natural corneal physiology
maintained, no use of lasers
13THERMAL PROCEDURES(use of heat)
- Eg. THERMOKERATOPLASTY
- involves creation of two sets of 8 spot burns
using holmium YAG laser - in ring pattern -
peripheral cornea - Heat gt coagulation - up to 90 of corneal depth
- Coagulation gt collagen shrinkage in periphery gt
generalised central steepening gt correct
hyperopia (up to 2.50D
14LAMELLAR PROCEDURES(removal of corneal tissue
excimer laser
- Laser Assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK)
- Laser Epithelial Keratomileusis (LASEK)
- Epithelial LASIK (EPI-LASIK)
15WHAT IS AN EXCIMER LASER?
- Acronym EXCIMER excited dimer
- refers to inert gas eg. Argon or Xenon bound with
a halogen eg. Fluorine or Chloride - combinationdiatomic gas halide - temporary
excited state
16EXCIMER LASER
- during decay gt emits UV of 193nm ? gt removal of
controlled amts of tissue with extreme precision
17EXCIMER LASER
18LASER ASSISTED IN-SITU KERATOMILEUSIS (LASIK)
- Concept first intro by Jose Barraquer, 1964
- founder Dr Ionas Pallikaris- first to use
microkeratome to cut thin flap of cornea and
laser to remove tissue - christened tech LASIK
- KERATOMILEUSIS to shape cornea
- IN-SITU in place
- therefore, LASIK to shape cornea in place
19PRINCIPLES OF LASIK
- To treat MYOPIA, the central cornea must be made
flatter. This is accomplished by removing tissue
from the center of the cornea.
20PRINCIPLES OF LASIK
- To treat HYPEROPIA, the central cornea must be
made steeper. This is accomplished by directing
the laser beam to remove tissue from around this
area.
21PRINCIPLES OF LASIK
- To treat ASTIGMATISM the cornea must be made more
spherical. By changing the pattern of the beam,
tissue is removed in one direction more than the
other.
22PRE-LASIK PATIENT EDUCATION
- Residual prescription - only those patient that
are still keen should be considered. - Can expect a ? in BCVA - many instances - 6/12-
6/9. A simulation using trial lenses -
demonstrate the possible corrected visual acuity
ffg LASIK
23PATIENT EDUCATION
- presbyopia and the need for reading spectacles
later on. - The option of monovision should be presented -
possibly simulated using contact lenses. - Patients with large pupil diameters in dim
illumination gt possibility of haloes and poor
vision at night.
24INCLUSION CRITERIA
- highly motivated - reasonable expectations -
risks and complications - Myopia initially only for high myopia gt6D but
recently for all errors therefore no clear cut
myopic ranges, varies, lower limit 1.00D.
Upper limit some up to 30D recent research
shown often upper limit 16D
25INCLUSION CRITERIA
- hyperopia 1-3D (higher incidence of regression
- astig up to 6D
- Adequate corneal thickness, gt 45O ?m
26INCLUSION CRITERIA
- Age gt 21 years old, no max age.
- stable refraction over past 24 months
- Central Ks gt 39D to ensure optimal corneal
surface to work on (poor flaps) lt 47D risk of
keratoconus - Informed consent
27EXCLUSION CRITERIA
- Monocular pxs
- Uncontrolled vascular dxs
- Immuno-compromise auto-immune dxs
- Corneal irregularities keratoconus, dystrophies,
infections (Herpes) - Pachymetry lt 450?m gt irregular astigmatism,
distortion, corneal rupture
28EXCLUSION CRITERIA
- Pregnant/nursing patients gt fluctuation of Vx,
effects on healing process, cant be put on
medication - Active ocular dx eg. Glaucoma, retinal diseases
- Ocular herpes within the last yr
- Progressive myopia
- Dry eyes tear integrity compromised ffg LASIK
29BASIC LASIK PROCEDURE
2
3
Suction ring applied (65mmHg)
Under L/A, cornea is marked
Microkeratome cut hinged flap
4
5
6
Flap folded to expose stromal bed
Stromal ablated
Flap repositioned
30POST-OP MX
- antibiotics and corticosteroid therapy(4-6wk
tapered course), tear supplements - return 1 day, 1 wk, 3wks, 3 months, 6months
- avoid water in eyes - no shower, hot tub or
swimming- first 2wks - wear protective gear in any contact sports
- avoid eye rubbing gt dislocation of flap
- enhancements / retreatment 3-6 mnths later
adequate stabilization of flap
31SIDE EFFECTS
- BLURRED VX d/2 haze, oedema, epithelial defects,
under / overcorrection
Corneal haze
32SIDE EFFECTS
- OPTICAL ABBERATIONS higher order (prolate to
oblate shape) gt ghost images, haloes, shadows gt
decrease optical quality - DRY EYES d/2
- conjunctival goblet cell damage / disruption of
feedback loop from lacrimal gland to brainstem
(neurotrophic theory) - cut corneal nerves ? sensitivity gt ? CSF and
optical quality
33SIDE EFFECTS
- NIGHT Vx PROBLEMS d/2 opt zone diam lt pupil
diam/ residual Rx / irregular astig gt haloes and
decr vision. Often require night driving Rx
Haloes
starbursts
34SIDE EFFECTS
- DISCOMFORT first 24 hrs, but not as painful as
PRK, d/2 speculum gt orbital ache - PHOTOPHOBIA related to optical quality and
scattering, healing or haze - CONJUNCTIVAL HAEMORHAGE d/2 application of
suction ring
35COMPLICATIONS
- Chisholm (2001) 5.3 cases
- INTRAOPERATIVE during surgical procedure eg
pupil bisection, free flap, loss of corneal flap,
perforated or thin flap, corneal perforation,
bleeding of neo vessels - POSTOPERATIVE following surgical procedure eg.
displaced flaps, corneal infection, diffuse
lamellar keratitis (Sands of Sahara), regression
36POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 1. ? in BCVA CSF
- d/2 higher order aberrations which ? optical
quality - Imp with artists, architects, draftsmen who
require good contrast sensitivity - Solution
- Expected that Wavefront guided ablations
- targeted beam - sent thro eye - focused on
retina. - wave of light rays - reflected back from the
retina through the eyes lens, pupil and cornea -
irregularities mxed with sensor - Using this mxment - used to program the laser
allows customized reshaping of cornea during the
LASIK procedure. - Hannush (2003) vs Phusitphoykai et al. (2003)
conflicting results
37POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 2. ? NIGHT VISION
- d/2
- Residual Rx
- Irregular astigm
- Pupil diam gt corrected optic zone diam
- Solution
- Rx for driving
- GP C/L
- Miotic drops
- Wavefront Rx
38POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 3. UNDERESTIMATION OF IOP
- Appl tono gt underestimates IOP
- d/2
- Flattened and thinned central cornea
- Implication delay diagnosis of glaucoma
- Solution IOPs gt 17mmHG should be investigated
further
39POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 4. DRY EYES
- d/2
- conjunctival goblet cell damage
- disruption of feedback loop from lacrimal gland
to brainstem (neurotrophic theory) - cut corneal nerves ? sensitivity
- Implications ? optical quality, discomfort
- Solution
- Tear supplements
- Punctal occlusion
40POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 5. IATROGENIC KERACTASIA
- d/2
- Bowing forward of post cornea thro weakened ant
cornea - Implication astigmatism keratoconus
- Solution
- Monitor post-refractive surgery patients closely
wrt corneal integrity - GP C/Ls
41POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 6. SLIT LAMP EXAMINATION
- ASSESS
- Integrity of flap
- Keratitis (Sands of Sahara) refer immediately
42POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 7. KERATOMETRY AXIAL LENGTH MEASUREMENT
- Accuracy of readings affected by refractive
surgery - Imp take these measurements prior to the
procedure in the event px require IOL later on
in life
43POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 8. DONOR CORNEAS
- Post- refractive surgery corneas cannot be used
for penetrating keratoplasty (corneal
transplants) - Concern negative impact on availability of
donor corneas
44POST REFRACTIVE SURGERYCLINCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE OPTOMETRIST
- 9. BINOCULAR VX CORRECTION WITH PRISMS
- Pxs using prisms in spectacles prior to
refractive surgery will require prism spectacles
45REFRACTIVE SURGERY THE OPTOMETRIST
- Unbiased advise to make an informed decision
- Requires practitioner education and familiarity
with different aspects of refractive surgery - interdisciplinary collaboration pre-op, post-op
management in conjunction with ophthalmologist - Research long term effects remain unknown ??
46- THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION !!