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- Title
PREVALENCE OF MYOPIC SHIFTS AMONG PATIENTS SEEKING CATARACT SURGERY.
- Authors
IRIBARREN, RAFAEL; IRIBARREN, GUILLERMO
- Abstract
Modern cataract surgery by phacoemulsification is a widely accepted procedure with a rapid recovery time. The prescription of specific intraocular lens, implanted during surgery, makes it possible to anticipate whether the patient will need reading glasses after the procedure. The present study analyses a sample of cataract surgery patients to show the frequency of myopic shifts related to nuclear opacity, which can result in clear near vision before surgery. A non-selected sample of consecutive patients who underwent elective cataract surgery in a private clinic was studied retrospectively. The myopic shift in refraction was assessed by comparing the old prescription with the spectacle correction at the time of interviewing.The mean age of the 229 subjects studied was 71.5 ± 10.4 years (109, 47.6%, males). A myopic shift in refraction, defined as at least – 0.5 diopters, was present in 37.1% of subjects (95% CI: 30.8%-43.4%). The mean change in refraction in these subjects was -2.52 ± 1.52 diopters. The percentage of subjects who had developed a myopic shift was significantly greater in those who presented greater nuclear opalescence. There were also differences in the mean myopic shift by refractive group, with the emmetropes having the greatest myopic shift. In this study of patients seeking cataract surgery in a clinical setting, more than one third had myopic shifts in refraction. This must be taken into account in order that patients maintain the benefit of clear near vision after surgery.
- Subjects
CATARACT surgery; PHACOEMULSIFICATION; OPACITY (Optics); CRITICAL opalescence; DISEASE prevalence
- Publication
Medicina (Buenos Aires), 2013, Vol 73, Issue 3, p207
- ISSN
0025-7680
- Publication type
Article