The visual limitation in keratoconus could be explained by different alterations that occur in these corneas and allowed development of a new grading system for this condition.
PURPOSE: To analyze the outcomes of intracorneal ring segment (ICRS) implantation for the treatment of keratoconus based on preoperative visual impairment. DESIGN: Multicenter, retrospective, nonrandomized study.METHODS: A total of 611 eyes of 361 keratoconic patients were evaluated. Subjects were classified according to their preoperative corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) into 5 different groups: grade I, CDVA of 0.90 or better; grade II, CDVA equal to or better than 0.60 and worse than 0.90; grade III, CDVA equal to or better than 0.40 and worse than 0.60; grade IV, CDVA equal to or better than 0.20 and worse than 0.40; and grade plus, CDVA worse than 0.20. Success and failure indices were defined based on visual, refractive, corneal topographic, and aberrometric data and evaluated in each group 6 months after ICRS implantation.RESULTS: Significant improvement after the procedure was observed regarding uncorrected distance visual acuity in all grades (P < .05). CDVA significantly decreased in grade I (P < .01) but significantly increased in all other grades (P < .05). A total of 37.9% of patients with preoperative CDVA 0.6 or better gained 1 or more lines of CDVA, whereas 82.8% of patients with preoperative CDVA 0.4 or worse gained 1 or more lines of CDVA (P < .01). Spherical equivalent and keratometry readings showed a significant reduction in all grades (P £ .02). Corneal higher-order aberrations did not change after the procedure (P ‡ .05).CONCLUSIONS: Based on preoperative visual impairment, ICRS implantation provides significantly better results in patients with a severe form of the disease. K ERATOCONUS IS AN ECTATIC DEBILITATING corneal disorder characterized by a progressive corneal thinning that results in corneal protrusion, irregular astigmatism, and decreased vision. 1 A variety of options have been described for the management of this pathologic condition, such as rigid gas-permeable contact lenses, 2 corneal collagen cross-linking, 3 intracorneal ring segment implantation, 4-11 or keratoplasty. 12 In a number of studies intracorneal ring segments (ICRS) have been demonstrated to be effective in improving visual acuity and reducing the refractive error and the mean keratometry in selected cases of keratoconic eyes. 4-11 Such a positive therapeutic effect is considered to be based on the induction of a remodeling of the corneal anterior and posterior surface's topography, which improves the optical quality of the cornea and reduces the optical aberrations, with consequent improvement in best-corrected visual acuity. [4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11] Although in the healthy cornea, the sectorial arcuate addition to the corneal local volume caused by these implants at the corneal midperiphery induces a flattening of the central cornea in an arc-shortening effect, with the consequence of a decrease in myopic spherical equivalent attributable to the overall reduction in the optical power of the cornea, 13 such corneal modeling effect may be different in structurally abnormal corneas such as in keratoco...
The human lens capsule thickness is at its maximum at the anterior midperiphery, which appears to be located central to the zonular insertion. It increases with age, especially at the anterior pole, while the midperipheral zone stabilizes or slightly decreases after the seventh decade. The anterior zonular insertion is actually related to a local pre-equatorial thinning, which remains unchanged with age. There was no posterior peripheral thickening, except in a few younger patients, with a modest relative maximum roughly at the equator. From here, the posterior capsule becomes progressively thinner and also diminishes with age, except for the thinnest, but stable posterior pole.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.