Abstract

To describe a stromal lenticule rotation surgical technique to correct mixed astigmatism and evaluate the initial clinical outcomes of this innovative approach. This retrospective case series included five eyes from five patients with mixed astigmatism that underwent intrastromal lenticule rotation surgery. The eyes were evaluated for uncorrected visual acuity, corrected distance visual acuity, manifest refraction, central corneal thickness, corneal volume, anterior and posterior K readings, and corneal higher order aberrations (HOAs) (including total HOAs, spherical aberrations, coma, and trefoil) using the Scheimpflug-Placido topographer before and 3 months after surgery. The corneal epithelium and stroma were imaged using anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) postoperatively. A paired-sample t-test was used to analyse the data. Clinical improvement was found in the uncorrected distance visual acuity (0.64 ± 0.11 logMAR vs. 0.20 ± 0.17 logMAR) and spherical and cylindrical diopters (D) (+2.65 ± 1.32 D vs. -0.05 ± 0.51 D and -4.95 ± 0.94 D vs. -1.10 ± 0.78 D, respectively). Anterior flat keratometry readings showed a steep trend (40.65 ± 1.24 D vs. 42.73 ± 0.63 D). Anterior corneal astigmatism decreased from 4.50 ± 0.55 D to 2.05 ± 0.73 D. According to the AS-OCT images, no significant epithelial remodelling was observed postoperatively. Although no significant differences were found among the increased corneal HOAs, the coma and trefoil changed much more than spherical aberrations 3 months postoperatively. The results for these five eyes suggest that the autologous stromal lenticule rotation technique is safe and effective; it may be an economical and feasible surgical option for correcting mixed astigmatism.

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