Abstract

Purpose. To compare the corneal biomechanical properties of keratoconic patients and age-matched controls using corneal visualization Scheimpflug technology (Corvis ST). Methods. Sixty keratoconic eyes from 47 keratoconus patients and 60 normal eyes from 60 controls were enrolled in this prospective study. Tomography and biomechanical parameters of all eyes were obtained with the Pentacam and Corvis ST, respectively. Intraocular pressure was measured using a Goldmann applanation tonometer. Results. The tomography and biomechanical parameters of the keratoconic corneas were significantly different from those of the normal corneas except for the anterior chamber angle, first applanation length, the highest concavity time, and peak distance. The deformation amplitude was the best predictive parameter (area under the curve: 0.882), with a sensitivity of 81.7%, although there was a significant overlap between keratoconic and normal corneas that ranged from 1.0 to 1.4 mm. In both the keratoconus and control groups, the deformation amplitude was negatively correlated with intraocular pressure, central corneal thickness, and corneal volume at 3 and 5 mm. Conclusions. Corvis ST offers an alternative method for measuring corneal biomechanical properties. The possibility of classifying keratoconus based on deformation amplitude deserves clinical attention.

Highlights

  • Keratoconus is an ectatic corneal disorder characterized by a progressive noninflammatory thinning of the corneal stroma, which results in corneal protrusion, irregular astigmatism, and decreased vision [1]

  • Several studies [10,11,12] have compared the biomechanical properties of normal and keratoconic corneas and found that the latter have lower corneal hysteresis and resistance. These parameters are derived from a proprietary algorithm applied to the measured waveform, and the ORA cannot display the dynamics of the deformation process in real time

  • To further evaluate the results obtained with the Corvis ST, we Journal of Ophthalmology applied Pentacam corneal tomography (Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany) to measure the anterior segment parameters

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Summary

Introduction

Keratoconus is an ectatic corneal disorder characterized by a progressive noninflammatory thinning of the corneal stroma, which results in corneal protrusion, irregular astigmatism, and decreased vision [1]. Several studies [10,11,12] have compared the biomechanical properties of normal and keratoconic corneas and found that the latter have lower corneal hysteresis and resistance These parameters are derived from a proprietary algorithm applied to the measured waveform, and the ORA cannot display the dynamics of the deformation process in real time. Corneal visualization Scheimpflug technology (Corvis ST, Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany) has been developed to evaluate corneal biomechanics. This instrument displays corneal deformation in real time and records the deformation parameters for analyzing corneal biomechanics [13]. To further evaluate the results obtained with the Corvis ST, we Journal of Ophthalmology applied Pentacam corneal tomography (Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany) to measure the anterior segment parameters

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