Eyeworld

FEB 2015

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

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67 EW FEATURE February 2015 IOL calculations Editors' note: Dr. Barrett has no finan- cial interests related to this article. Contact information Barrett: graham.barrett@uwa.edu.au a secondary tool to confirm your primary is giving you the correct reading," he said. "Warren uses the analogy of a pilot who doesn't have just one instrument. The pilot has other instruments to make sure the primary instrument is correct." EW wondered why that is. It's odd and not obeying the rules you would expect from an optical surface. My basic theory is that the normal cornea tends to be elliptical. The diameter is wider in the horizontal meridian. Therefore, that means the curvature of the posterior cornea has to be steeper than the vertical. That means you have against-the-rule astigmatism because the posterior cornea is convex. That also explains why almost all corneas exhibit against-the-rule behavior," he said. Using that background, Dr. Barrett was able to calculate a mea- surement for the diameter of the cornea for each patient and calculate the posterior corneal curvature. Looking at the evidence Because the Barrett Toric Calculator is relatively new—it has only been online since the summer of 2013— clinical evidence to support it is just now reaching peer-reviewed jour- nals. In a submission that is in press, Dr. Barrett said his calculator was found to be within half a diopter of residual astigmatism 75% of the time compared with only 33% of the time for the Alcon AcrySof calculator (Fort Worth, Texas) or the Holladay calculator. By adding the Baylor no- mogram, the accuracy of the Alcon and Holladay calculators increased to 50%, he said. "The [Barrett Toric] theoretical method is doing signifi- cantly better than actually measur- ing the posterior cornea," he said. The Barrett Toric Calculator is available on the websites of ASCRS (www.ascrs.org/barrett-toric- calculator) and APACRS (apacrs.org). The APACRS website also features Dr. Barrett's True-K formula and Universal II formula. The calculator was also recent- ly built into the LENSTAR LS900 (Haag-Streit, Koniz, Switzerland). Dr. Barrett encourages surgeons to think carefully about other vari- ables that affect their toric IOL use, such as selecting one primary tool to measure the cornea and then always using secondary tools, a concept he learned from Warren Hill, MD, Mesa, Ariz. "You may have the LENSTAR or other tool for your primary mea- surement, but you also have to have

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