Abstract

The purpose is to study the change in visual acuity obtained with sclerocorneal contact lens (SCL) in patients with irregular corneal astigmatism. A prospective pre-post observational study was designed to include consecutive consenting patients with irregular corneal astigmatism and best-corrected visual acuity worse than 6/12 and fitted with SCL. Visual acuity was assessed using Snellen charts before fitting SCL and 1 week after the fit and converted to the equivalent logMAR units for analysis. We included 51 eyes of 41 patients with a mean age of 26.31 ± 8.86 of which 32 (78%) were men. Keratoconus was the most common indication (n = 42 eyes, 82.35%), followed by corneal scar (n = 3, 4%), post keratoplasty (n = 2, 4%), high myopia (n = 2, 4%), pellucid marginal degeneration (n = 1, 2%), and aphakia (n = 1, 2%). The mean overall uncorrected visual acuity improved significantly (P < 0.001) with SCL from 1.18 ± 0.34 logMAR (6/120 Snellen's equivalent) to 0.27 ± 0.15 (6/9 Snellen's equivalent) at 1-week post-SCL fitting. The mean overall best spectacle-corrected visual acuity improved from 0.89 ± 0.45 logMAR (6/36 Snellen's equivalent) to 0.26 ± 0.15 (6/9 Snellen's equivalent) at 1-week post-SCL fitting. Sclerocorneal contact lens improves visual acuity significantly in patients with irregular corneal astigmatism and reduces the need for corneal transplantation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call