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CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ keratomileusis (LASIK) Non-contact laser thermal keratoplasty
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CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

CORNEAL SURGERY

1. Penetrating keratoplasty

2. Keratoprosthesis

3. Refractive surgery• Radial keratotomy• Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK)• Laser in-situ keratomileusis (LASIK)• Non-contact laser thermal keratoplasty

Page 2: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Penetrating Keratoplasty

1. Indications• Optical (e.g. bullous keratopathy, dystrophies)• Tectonic (e.g. severe stromal thinning, descemetocele)• Therapeutic (e.g. severe keratitis)• Cosmetic

• Severe stromal vascularization• Absence of corneal sensation• Progressive conjunctival inflammation (e.g. pemphigoid)• Tear film dysfunction• Glaucoma

2. Adverse prognostic factors

Page 3: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Technique of penetrating keratoplasty

Excision of donor tissue a, b - Excision of host tissue

c - Fixation of donor tissue

Page 4: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Signs of late graft rejectionEpithelial

• Intensive topical and periocular steroids• Occasionally systemic steroids

Endothelial

Treatment

Iritis and inflammation at graft-host junction

Endothelial precipitates (Khodadoust line)

Linear epithelial opacity Subepithelial opacities

Page 5: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

KeratoprosthesisIndications

Bilateral blindness from ocular pemphigoid, chemical burns or repeated graft failure

Insertion of artificial lenticule into corneal stroma

• Glaucoma

Main complications• Retrolenticular membrane formation

Technique

Page 6: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Radial keratotomy

Main indications• Stable myopia of up to 8D• Otherwise normal cornea

• Accidental perforation• Intrastromal epithelial cysts

Main complications

• Decreases myopia by flattening cornea• Deep incisions from edge of optical zone to limbus

Page 7: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Photorefractive keratectomy ( PRK )Indications• Stable myopia up to 6D with astigmatism no more than 3D• Hypermetropia up to 2.5D

Main complication

Subepithelial haze which usually resolves after 1-6 months

Reshaping of cornea by excimer laser ablation of Bowman layer and anterior stroma

Technique

Page 8: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Laser in-situ keratomileusis (LASIK)Indications - similar to PRK but corrects higher degrees of myopia

• Thin flap of cornea fashioned

• Bed treated with excimer laser

• Flap repositioned

Complications

• Wrinkles in flap

• Cellular interface proliferation

Technique

Page 9: CORNEAL SURGERY 1. Penetrating keratoplasty 2. Keratoprosthesis 3. Refractive surgery Radial keratotomy Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) Laser in-situ.

Non-contact laser thermal keratoplastyIndications• Patients over 40 years with hypermetropia up to 2D• Following overcorrection of myopia

• Corneal curvature is steepened by application of laser heat to stroma• Holmium laser spots applied to mid-cornea