Abstract

To investigate the effect of flap thickness on wavefront aberrations induced by LASIK. LASIK was performed on 56 eyes of 28 patients with refraction errors that were well matched between the right and left eyes. For each patient, a planned 160-microm flap was created for one randomly selected eye using the Moria M2 microkeratome (130-microm head; thick flap group), and a 110-microm flap was created for the contralateral eye with the same microkeratome (90-microm head; thin flap group). Flap thickness was measured using ultrasonic pachymetry. Wavefront aberrations were measured in the anterior cornea using the Orbscan II (Bausch & Lomb) and in the whole eye using the Wavefront Supported Custom Ablation (WASCA) aberrometer (Carl Zeiss Meditec) preoperatively and at 1 month and 1 year postoperatively. Mean flap thickness was 155 +/- 13 microm in the thick flap group and 112 +/- 11 microm in the thin flap group. Mean root-mean-square of higher order wavefront aberrations were changed for the different test times in the cornea (F = 29.9, P < .0001) and the whole eye (F = 48.0, P < .0001). There was no significant difference between the two flap groups for the cornea (F = 0.76) or for the whole eye (F = 0.07). Similar results were observed for higher order Zernike aberrations such as spherical aberration and comas. The results suggest higher order wavefront aberrations induced by LASIK are independent of flap thickness. Complications in visual outcome for patients with different flap thickness should be attributed to factors other than aberrations.

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