EyeWorld is the official news magazine of the American Society of Cataract & Refractive Surgery.
Issue link: https://digital.eyeworld.org/i/1035656
EW FEATURE 80 Revisiting astigmatism • October 2018 do best with a toric IOL, which rules out the low-add multifocal Tecnis ZLB00 and ZKB00, which are only available in spherical powers. Dr. Lindstrom: I mostly use Sym- fony toric with good experience. There is a small incidence of rota- tion, less than 5%. EyeWorld: Are there patients with corneal cylinder in whom you would not put a multifocal or EDOF IOL? What about cases with irregu- lar astigmatism or keratoconus? Dr. Patterson: I'm not going to put a premium lens in someone with corneal pathology because, in my opinion, that means the cornea will not tolerate a premium technolo- gy in the first place. ... If you use a premium lens and you can't use an LRI or toric option, to me there is something wrong with the cornea and you shouldn't be doing it. Irregular astigmatism, astig- matism that is a pellucid marginal degeneration, some sort of keratoco- nus patient, I won't use it on. Any patient who has severe keratopathy, such as map-dot-fingerprint that has not been treated, Salzmann's nod- ule, a herpetic eye patient, I would not use a lot of multifocal lenses in people who have corneal pathology because we know without question their side effects are greater. They have more glare, more halo, and you're not as accurate in treating their astigmatism. Dr. Raviv: If their corneal cylinder is irregular, they may not be great multifocal/EDOF IOL candidates but also not toric. Also, patients with cylinder above 3 D will do best with the higher toric power IOLs, which are only currently available with the monofocals. If consistent repeatable Ks are achieved on multiple devices, I'm inclined to offer toric IOLs for ker- atoconus. For irregular astigmatism from pterygium, epithelial basement membrane dystrophy, Salzmann's, I generally recommend treating the pathology before proceeding with a presbyopia-correcting IOL. Dr. Lindstrom: I wouldn't implant diffractive multifocal IOLs in any- one with over 0.5 root mean square of higher order aberration. I also am sure to look for dry eye, which is treatable. EyeWorld: What about IOLs in the pipeline, which could be used for both presbyopia and astigmatism correction? Dr. Patterson: The IC-8 (AcuFocus, Irvine, California) is going to be a game changer. It has distance and near correction, and regardless of the axis that it falls on, the toricity is still going to be corrected. I'm excited about the AT LISA, which is the trifocal from Carl Zeiss Meditec (Jena, Germany). I'm more excited about the AT LARA (Carl Zeiss Meditec). … The ability to have some sort of accommodative/ enhanced depth of focus lens over a multifocal is always going to be a little better because it's a blended vi- sion. If we can get that a little more have significant cylinder to treat in the cataract age population. I would estimate that more of my EDOF pa- tients get the toric version over the spherical one. Reducing astigmatism is so important in refractive cataract surgery that I will frequently choose the type of presbyopia-correcting IOL based on the astigmatism pres- ent. For example, anyone with 1.25 D of ATR cylinder or greater would Astigmatism continued from page 78 LRI being placed at the limbus Source (all): Michael Patterson, DO Marking the axis for an LRI