We report four cases of keratitis and corneal scarring from a total of 117 eyes treated with CXL. The location of the scarring determined the amount of loss of visual acuity: in two eyes, there was a persistent decrease in best spectacle-corrected visual acuity.
The bag-in-the-lens implantation technique in children and babies was safe and kept the visual axis clear after cataract surgery. In the near future, 4.0 or 4.5 mm IOLs will be available that may improve the success rate of IOL implantation in the small eyes of babies.
The cumulative Nd:YAG laser rate after bag-in-the-lens implantation was zero. A zero rate has not been reported with lens-in-the-bag implantation of an IOL of the same biomaterial or of other biomaterials, as published in the literature. Thus, it can be concluded that the bag-in-the-lens implantation technique has 100% effectiveness against posterior capsule opacification.
We describe a new type of caliper to optimize the size, shape, and centration of the capsulorhexis during intraocular lens (IOL) surgery. This flexible, ring-shaped tool is positioned on the anterior capsule surface, where it is kept in place by an ophthalmic viscosurgical device. When in place, the caliper provides an ideal guide for the surgeon to follow and facilitates optimal capsulorhexis shape and centration.
The BIL IOL met the ISO criteria; that is, primary PCCC was safe in healthy eyes and in eyes with ocular comorbidities and no eye developed PCO over a mean follow-up of 26.1 ± 21.3 months.
Special care should be taken of patients who have a preoperative history of strabismus surgery, an overcorrection or undercorrection in 1 or both eyes, or anisometropia and of those who are unhappy with contact lenses. An orthoptic examination should be done with and without spectacle correction to detect underlying vertical phorias. Intended monovision should be examined initially using contact lenses.
Lens epithelial cell proliferation was mild and confined to the periphery of the capsular bag during follow-up, and the bag-in-the-lens IOL optic remained clear.
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