Background: It is unclear whether post-operative errors after toric intraocular lens implantation would be more amenable to pre-operative correction with a fixed adjustment or a correction ratio that scales with the m...Background: It is unclear whether post-operative errors after toric intraocular lens implantation would be more amenable to pre-operative correction with a fixed adjustment or a correction ratio that scales with the magnitude of pre-operative astigmatism. Purpose: To investigate the effect of pre-operative anterior corneal astigmatism orientation on outcomes of toric intraocular lens implantation in a large population. Methods: A retrospective cohort study of 625 patients undergoing refractive lens exchange through a superior clear corneal incision with Oculentis M-Plus toric intraocular lens implantation at an Optical Express, Inc. located in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Patients were stratified by axis of astigmatism on automated keratometry as with-the-rule, against-the-rule, or oblique. Analysis of visual acuity and refractive outcomes was performed using American National Standards Institute (ANSI) guidelines on astigmatic corrections with non-vector as well as vector analyses. Analysis was limited to one eye per patient. Results: Patients who had with-the-rule (WTR) astigmatism, compared with oblique and against-the-rule (ATR), had higher vector magnitudes of surgically induced refractive correction (2.89D, 2.55D, 2.42D;p Conclusions: Refractive lens exchange surgery using toric intraocular lenses overcorrected patients who had with-the-rule astigmatism. Degree of overcorrection did not vary with severity of pre-operative astigmatism. Incorporation of axis of astigmatism in lens selection and reduction of astigmatic correction among with-the-rule patients by an absolute value of 0.25D - 0.35D, rather than proportional adjustments, may reduce cylindrical over-correction.展开更多
Background:The Retinal Function Imager(RFI)provides in vivo and noninvasive imaging of both the retinal structure and function.Review:The RFI can create capillary perfusion maps,measure blood flow velocity,and determi...Background:The Retinal Function Imager(RFI)provides in vivo and noninvasive imaging of both the retinal structure and function.Review:The RFI can create capillary perfusion maps,measure blood flow velocity,and determine metabolic function including blood oximetry.It can aid clinical diagnosis as well as assess treatment response in several retinal vascular diseases including diabetic retinopathy.Blood flow velocity abnormalities have also been implicated in disease such as age-related macular degeneration and require further investigation.Compared with optical coherence tomography angiography,the RFI produces capillary maps of comparable image quality and wider field of view but it is unable to provide depth-resolved information and has longer image acquisition time.Currently,functional imaging using blood oximetry has limited applications and additional research is required.Conclusion:The RFI offers noninvasive,high-resolution imaging of retinal microvasculature by creating capillary perfusion maps.In addition,it is capable of measuring retinal blood velocity directly and performs functional imaging with retinal blood oximetry.Its clinical applications are broad and additional research with functional imaging may potentially lead to diagnosis of diseases and their progression before anatomic abnormalities become evident,but longer image acquisition times may limit its clinical adoption.展开更多
文摘Background: It is unclear whether post-operative errors after toric intraocular lens implantation would be more amenable to pre-operative correction with a fixed adjustment or a correction ratio that scales with the magnitude of pre-operative astigmatism. Purpose: To investigate the effect of pre-operative anterior corneal astigmatism orientation on outcomes of toric intraocular lens implantation in a large population. Methods: A retrospective cohort study of 625 patients undergoing refractive lens exchange through a superior clear corneal incision with Oculentis M-Plus toric intraocular lens implantation at an Optical Express, Inc. located in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Patients were stratified by axis of astigmatism on automated keratometry as with-the-rule, against-the-rule, or oblique. Analysis of visual acuity and refractive outcomes was performed using American National Standards Institute (ANSI) guidelines on astigmatic corrections with non-vector as well as vector analyses. Analysis was limited to one eye per patient. Results: Patients who had with-the-rule (WTR) astigmatism, compared with oblique and against-the-rule (ATR), had higher vector magnitudes of surgically induced refractive correction (2.89D, 2.55D, 2.42D;p Conclusions: Refractive lens exchange surgery using toric intraocular lenses overcorrected patients who had with-the-rule astigmatism. Degree of overcorrection did not vary with severity of pre-operative astigmatism. Incorporation of axis of astigmatism in lens selection and reduction of astigmatic correction among with-the-rule patients by an absolute value of 0.25D - 0.35D, rather than proportional adjustments, may reduce cylindrical over-correction.
文摘Background:The Retinal Function Imager(RFI)provides in vivo and noninvasive imaging of both the retinal structure and function.Review:The RFI can create capillary perfusion maps,measure blood flow velocity,and determine metabolic function including blood oximetry.It can aid clinical diagnosis as well as assess treatment response in several retinal vascular diseases including diabetic retinopathy.Blood flow velocity abnormalities have also been implicated in disease such as age-related macular degeneration and require further investigation.Compared with optical coherence tomography angiography,the RFI produces capillary maps of comparable image quality and wider field of view but it is unable to provide depth-resolved information and has longer image acquisition time.Currently,functional imaging using blood oximetry has limited applications and additional research is required.Conclusion:The RFI offers noninvasive,high-resolution imaging of retinal microvasculature by creating capillary perfusion maps.In addition,it is capable of measuring retinal blood velocity directly and performs functional imaging with retinal blood oximetry.Its clinical applications are broad and additional research with functional imaging may potentially lead to diagnosis of diseases and their progression before anatomic abnormalities become evident,but longer image acquisition times may limit its clinical adoption.