Abstract

ABSTRACTPurpose: To assess intraoperative morphology of clear corneal incisions (CCI) and its impact on incision-site descemet membrane detachment (DMD) in conventional phacoemulsification and femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgery (FLACS).Methods: Prospective comparative study of 129 eyes that underwent either conventional phacoemulsification (Group I, n = 77) or FLACS (Group II, n = 52) was undertaken at an apex tertiary care ophthalmic setup. In group I, a 2.2-mm metal keratome was used to create a biplanar CCI. In group II, femtosecond laser-assisted biplanar CCI was created with 2.2 mm diameter. Incision architecture and incision-site DMD were assessed using microscope-integrated intraoperative OCT (iOCT) and anterior segment OCT on postoperative day (POD) 1 and 30. Visual acuity was assessed on POD 1 and 30.Results: Smooth slit (SS) or ragged slit (RS) morphology of the proximal opening of CCI was observed immediately after creation [Group I: 68.8% SS, 31.2% RS; Group II: 86.5% SS, 13.5% RS]. DMD was observed in 87.1% cases with RS and 16.3% cases with SS morphology (p < 0.001). DMD was more frequent in group I (Group I = 38/77, Group II = 5/52; p < 0.001) and most commonly observed during the step of stromal hydration (83.7%). DMD was self-resolving and did not persist in any group at 1 month. Visual acuity was comparable in both groups on POD 1 and 30.Conclusion: Ragged morphology of proximal opening of CCI is the most important predictive factor for incision-site DMD. Femtosecond-laser CCIs have less incision-site DMD as compared to keratome-assisted CCIs. iOCT provides real-time assessment of CCI morphology and DMD.

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