Abstract

To evaluate the influence of posterior capsular opacification (PCO) on macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging quality and measurements of macular retinal thickness. In this prospective interventional case series, 32 eyes of 23 patients with PCO were recruited. Best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), a complete ophthalmologic assessment, and macular OCT scans (OCT Stratus 3000) before and after Nd:YAG capsulotomy were performed. Two parameters for image quality (signal strength (SS) and number of tomographic messages) and 10 macular retinal thickness measurements were compared. Spearman correlations between BCVA and SS and macular retinal thickness measurements before and after capsulotomy were also performed. PCO removal was associated with an increase of best-corrected visual acuity (p<0.0001). The mean SS (n=32) went from 3.34+/-2.31 to 6.38+/-1.93 (p<0.0001) after Nd:YAG capsulotomy. The SS improved in 26 of 32 eyes. No significant difference between mean preoperative and postoperative macular retinal thickness measurements was observed (p<0.05) in valuable scans. Before capsulotomy, a correlation existed between BCVA and SS. After capsulotomy this correlation was no longer found. OCT image quality is influenced by PCO. Nd:YAG capsulotomy results in a measurable improvement in SS and improvement in the number of valuable examinations. Valuable OCT scans in patients with PCO seem to yield reliable measurements of macular retinal thickness even in the presence of severe PCO. The correlation between BCVA and SS before capsulotomy suggests that the SS could be considered an objective indicator of the degree of PCO.

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