Abstract
To evaluate corneal endothelial cell density (ECD) in the eyes with different grades of late spontaneous in-the-bag intraocular lens (IOL) dislocation. A prospective study included seventy-eight patients who applied for IOL dislocation. Overall 80 eyes were divided into four grades based on the in-the-bag IOL dislocation classification. All eyes underwent a complete ophthalmological examination. ECD was evaluated using in vivo corneal confocal microscopy. Median corneal ECD was 1929 (1022-2958)cells/mm2 of all the patients. The lowest number of ECD was in grade 2 (grade 1 median ECD 1990.33 (1182-2425.33)cells/mm2, grade 2-1577.0 (1022-2958)cells/mm2, grade 3-2205.84 (1259-2807.67)cells/mm2 and grade 4-2072.17 (1045-2581.0)cells/mm2). A statistically significant difference was observed between the median of ECD of grade 2nd and 3rd (p = 0.023). By grouping cases into those with and without glaucoma, we found that corneal ECD was significantly lower in eyes with glaucoma compared with eyes without glaucoma in grades 3 and 4 (p < 0.05), while in other grades, the difference did not reach the significance level. We divided the corneal ECD of all eyes into two categories ≤ 1500cells/mm2 and > 1500cells/mm2. Logistic regression demonstrated that the odds of having corneal ECD less than 1500 cells/mm2 increased by 3.5-fold if patients with IOL dislocation had been diagnosed with glaucoma previously. Late spontaneous in-the-bag IOL dislocation reduced corneal ECD. Previously diagnosed glaucoma was the most common comorbidity. This condition has a significant impact on corneal ECD for patients with IOL dislocation.
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