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Volume 112, Issue 6, Pages 998-1002 (June 2005)


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Establishing Analysis Parameters for Spherical Aberration after Wavefront LASIK

James Andrew Hiatt, M.D., Colin N. Grant, B.S., Brian S. Boxer Wachler, M.D.1Corresponding Author Informationemail address

Received 14 July 2004; accepted 4 January 2005.

Purpose

To compare preoperative and postoperative spherical aberration, coma, and other higher order aberrations from wavefront LASIK at varying pupil analysis diameters and different myopic corrections, and to determine acceptable parameters for wavefront measurements.

Design

Nonrandomized retrospective chart review.

Participants

Twenty-one eyes of 12 patients who had CustomCornea LASIK with the LADARVision 4000 (Alcon, Fort Worth, TX).

Methods

Wavefront analyses were performed before and 3 months after CustomCornea LASIK using a 6.5-mm central optical zone and blend zone to 9.0 mm. Wavefront measurements were made with pupil analysis diameters of 5.5, 6.0, 6.5, and 7.0 mm. Myopic corrections were divided into 3 spherical equivalent subgroups: low (<3 diopters [D]), medium (3–6 D), and high (>6 D). Main outcome measures were compared based on myopic subgroup within each analysis diameter. Results were analyzed with analysis of variance and paired t tests.

Main Outcomes Measures

Spherical aberration, coma, and other higher order aberrations.

Results

There were no significant increases in coma or other higher order aberrations postoperatively or with larger analysis diameters. There was a significant increase in postoperative differences in spherical aberration between 6.5 and 7.0 mm for the >6-D myopic correction subgroup (P = 0.03). Differences between other 0.5-mm intervals and other subgroups were not significant.

Conclusions

The largest difference between preoperative and postoperative spherical aberration occurred at the analysis diameter 0.5 mm greater than the laser optical zone for the subgroup with high myopic correction. To detect larger degrees of induced spherical aberrations, analysis diameters 0.5 mm larger than the central laser optical zone should be considered.

Boxer Wachler Vision Institute, Beverly Hills, California.

Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to Brian S. Boxer Wachler, MD, Boxer Wachler Vision Institute, 465 North Roxbury Drive, Suite 902, Beverly Hills, CA 90210.

 Manuscript no. 240561.

1 Dr Boxer Wachler is a consultant for Alcon Laboratories, Inc.

PII: S0161-6420(05)00119-3

doi:10.1016/j.ophtha.2005.01.013


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