J Korean Ophthalmol Soc.
2002 Jul;43(7):1113-1122.
Corneal Astigmatic Change in Corneal Topography After Upper Eyelid Surgery
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Ophthalmology, Gachon Medical School, Ghil Medical Center, Inchon, Korea. shbaek@ghil.com
Abstract
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PURPOSE: The study was conducted to determine if there is a corneal astigmatic changes after upper
eyelid surgery by using corneal topography and if these changes are the reason why some patients note a
decrease in visual acuity.
METHODS
Twenty four eyes of 12 patients with dermatochalasis who had undergone upper eyelid blepharoplasty, and 24 eyes of 12 patients who had undergone aesthetic double fold formation were included. We performed corneal topography during the postoperative 3 months and also evaluated the corneal refractive index change on thirteen points of the central cornea, which were located in the center of the corneal apex and apart from it by 1.5, 2.5, 3.5 mm along each axis corresponding to the 0 degrees, 90 degrees, 180 degrees, 270 degrees respectively.
RESULTS
Corneal topography demonstrated increase in with-the-rule astigmatism by 38, 33, and 12% for dermatochalasis patients at 1week, 1month, and 3months after surgery, and by 25%, 17%, and 13% for double fold patients. However the increase in with-the-rule astigmatism seemed to be temporary, showing gradual regression. The refractive index change of thirteen points of central cornea was not significant except a few eyes with astigmatic changes greater than 1D until 1 month after surgery. There was alsoincreased astigmatism after surgery in vector-corrected analysis.
CONCLUSIONS
There was a tendency of increase in with-the-rule astigmatism and those changes were temporary and regressed gradually. No patient showed significant refractive index change on the 13 points of central cornea but some showed changes greater than 1 D in the early postoperative period, causing visually significant astigmatic changes temporarily.