Eyeworld

FEB 2015

EyeWorld is the official news magazine of the American Society of Cataract & Refractive Surgery.

Issue link: https://digital.eyeworld.org/i/454945

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 123 of 140

121 February 2015 EW MEETING REPORTER he now thinks that it should be introduced after residents have per- formed about 50 manual procedures. He thinks that FLACS will be part of the future of refractive cataract surgery and should be taught in training programs. Editors' note: Dr. McCulley has financial interests with Alcon. How to handle mid stromal corneal opacities Christopher Rapuano, MD, Philadelphia, spoke about hemi- automated anterior lamellar kerato- plasty, which is a procedure that can be used particularly for mid stromal corneal opacities. Anterior lamellar keratoplas- ty (ALK) with a microkeratome or a femtosecond laser uses a depth plate, Dr. Rapuano said, but the in- herent procedural problem with this is that if the recipient cornea is not of uniform thickness, the residual posterior cornea will also not be of uniform thickness if a uniform thickness anterior lamellar cap is removed. The ideal solution for mid stromal pathology includes smooth donor and recipient beds, no donor cornea/recipient bed thickness mismatch, no donor cornea/recipi- ent size mismatch, minimal risk of perforation/conversion to penetrat- ing keratoplasty (PK), and is not too time consuming. This is where hemi-automated anterior lamellar keratoplasty (HALK) comes in. The donor anterior corneal button is fashioned with a microkeratome and trephined. The surgeon can select a specific microkeratome depth plate and the exact graft diameter. Despite some potential advantages of using HALK, there are also some disad- vantages. The blade dissection of the recipient does not always create a smooth stromal bed of uniform thickness, and even if uniform, the thickness of the donor cornea does not always equal the thickness of what was removed. Dr. Rapuano concluded by highlighting which keratoplasty procedures are ideal in certain situations. Microkeratome-assisted ALK and excimer laser PTK work well for superficial corneal patholo- gy, he said. DALK works well in deep pathology. HALK is a good option for mid depth stromal pathology, especially with areas of varied corneal thickness, he said. EW Editors' note: Dr. Rapuano has no related financial interests. View it now: Hawaiian Eye 2015 ... EWrePlay.org Sonia Yoo, MD, discusses complex scenarios involving femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgery.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Eyeworld - FEB 2015