Abstract

The concept of lamellar keratoplasty (LK) is that of targeted lamellar replacement of corneal tissue while retaining normal cornea. It involves replacing anterior stroma at different deepness with an anterior lamellar keratoplasty (ALK). Despite the significant advantages of LK surgery, penetrating keratoplasty (PK) remains the most common procedure, largely because lamellar surgery is more technically demanding and time consuming 1. Moreover, interface irregularity arising from manual lamellar dissection often results in suboptimal visual outcomes 2. Long-term graft survival rates and endothelial cell counts after PK continue to drop for many years after surgery, clearly showing the disadvantage of unnecessary replacement of a healthy endothelium in anterior-stromal disorders 3. For these reasons, PK is now being replaced by various types of lamellar techniques that aim to replace damaged tissue only, while maintaining healthy tissue intact. Recent improvements of surgical techniques and advances in instrumentation, such as microkeratome-assisted LK (ALTK) 4, and excimer laser assisted LK (ELLK), 5,6 have contributed to improve visual quality in corneal lamellar surgery, promoting a paradigm shift in the surgical treatment of anterior corneal disease. The new femtosecond laser technology has been introduced for ophthalmic surgery in the last years with the aim to resolve the microkeratomes related problems in LASIK surgery 7. This new technology has been shown to be the “top” to perform LASIK flaps, creating flaps of precise and homogeneous thickness, reducing the flap related problems (free cap, button hole, flap irregularity) and leaving more stroma for the excimer ablation allowing to correct higher refractive defects (especially with the ultrathin flaps of 90 microns). Moreover, the femtolaser technology, allowing to perform precise corneal cuts with a planned and customized shape, offers clear advantages also applied in anterior lamellar keratoplasty (ALK) surgery8-10. Penetrating Keratoplasty (PK) is still the most common and effective technique for corneal transplantation, but is an “open sky” surgical technique and could be complicated by choroidal effusion or haemorrage, spontaneous lens expression and vitreous loss 1. Moreover, this technique is characterized by an everlasting endothelial cell loss, leading to corneal decompensation necessitating a re-PK to restore a clear graft. To avoid these risks, more conservative surgical techniques have been proposed for the treatment of anterior corneal pathologies with healthy endothelium, enclosed in the great chapter of the lamellar keratoplasty (LK) 2, 3. So that, during the last 10 years, to increase the results of traditional

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