Postoperative Refraction in the Second Eye Having Cataract Surgery
Author(s) -
Christopher T. Leffler,
Martin Wilkes,
Juliana Reeves,
Muneera A. Mahmood
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
isrn ophthalmology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-5696
pISSN - 2090-5688
DOI - 10.5402/2011/273923
Subject(s) - refraction , phacoemulsification , medicine , ophthalmology , subjective refraction , optometry , refractive error , eye disease , optics , visual acuity , physics
. Previous cataract surgery studies assumed that first-eye predicted and observed postoperative refractions are equally important for predicting second-eye postoperative refraction. Methods . In a retrospective analysis of 173 patients having bilateral sequential phacoemulsification, multivariable linear regression was used to predict the second-eye postoperative refraction based on refractions predicted by the SRK-T formula for both eyes, the first-eye postoperative refraction, and the difference in IOL selected between eyes. Results . The first-eye observed postoperative refraction was an independent predictor of the second eye postoperative refraction ( P < 0.001) and was weighted more heavily than the first-eye predicted refraction. Compared with the SRK-T formula, this model reduced the root-mean-squared (RMS) error of the predicted refraction by 11.3%. Conclusions . The first-eye postoperative refraction is an independent predictor of the second-eye postoperative refraction. The first-eye predicted refraction is less important. These findings may be due to interocular symmetry.
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