Eyeworld

APR 2015

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

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51 EW REFRACTIVE SURGERY April 2015 Contact information Santhiago: marconysanthiago@hotmail.com Wilson: WILSONS4@ccf.org Editors' note: Drs. Santhiago and Wilson have no financial interests related to their comments. eyes with normal preoperative topography. Am J Ophthalmol. 2014 Jul:158(1):87–95. Dr. Santhiago thinks the study demonstrates that PTA should be considered when screening a refrac- tive surgery patient. "We have to take PTA into ac- count, and if it is higher than 40%, I would strongly recommend that you consider the patient high risk," he said. Converting such patients to PRK puts them in the safe zone, as this removes the flap thickness from the equation, he said. For his part, Dr. Wilson views this as a helpful tool for determining which patients should be steered to PRK, and thereby potentially spared the risk of ectasia. "A lot of us, if all things are nor- mal, would like to do LASIK because the patient's visual recovery is fast- er," he said. "While PRK is a good procedure, too, I'm confident that if it's safe I would rather do the LASIK procedure." PTA can help to put him in a position to determine if this can be safely accomplished. For patients approaching that 40% number, Dr. Wilson says that he is much more likely to go the PRK route. Dr. Santhiago thinks that mak- ing the incorporation of PTA values easier for surgeons will be very im- portant. He also thinks that spurred by this, more surgeons will incor- porate any technique of small-inci- sion lenticule extraction or surface ablation for myopia. "It should also be noted that as a risk factor, the weakening predict- ed by a high PTA or any other factor does not mean ectasia will occur in all high-risk eyes, but that these eyes carry increased risk for ectasia. Given the elective nature of LASIK, it seems logical that the balance of risk acceptance should be weighted toward minimizing risk, especially when other excellent procedures are available for refractive correction," Dr. Santhiago said, adding that abnormal corneal topography is still the most important risk factor for post-LASIK ectasia. EW Reference Santhiago MR, Smadja D, Gomes BF, Mello GR, Monteiro ML, Wilson SE, Randleman JB. Association between the percent tissue altered and post-laser in situ keratomileusis ectasia in

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