Abstract

BackgroundAccumulating evidence suggests that refractive stabilization occurs rapidly following small incision cataract surgery. Nonetheless, many guidelines still suggest waiting four to 6 weeks before prescribing corrective lenses. This study was undertaken to supplement the existing literature regarding refractive stabilization, and evaluate multiple contributing factors that could dissuade clinicians from confidently correcting refractive error in the early post-operative course following routine cataract surgeries.MethodsAdult patients undergoing phacoemulsification cataract surgery with uncomplicated surgeries and post-surgical courses at the Calgary Ophthalmology Centre (Calgary, Alberta, Canada) were included in this prospective observational case series. Exclusion criteria included known corneal dystrophies, infectious keratitis, complicated surgery or toric/multifocal IOLs. Data was collected at weekly intervals for a total of 6 weeks. Collected data included autorefraction, visual acuity, corneal pachymetry, and effective lens position.ResultsOne hundred six eyes of 104 patients were included in this study. Post-operative sphere, cylinder and spherical equivalent were not significantly different at any post-operative week compared with week six, and 80–86% of patients were within 0.5D of last follow-up spherical equivalent at any week. The secondary outcomes of central corneal thickness, effective lens position and visual acuity did, however, exhibit significant differences between early post-operative weeks and last follow-up values.ConclusionsThese data suggest that refractive error can be effectively measured and corrected as early as one-week post-operatively in the majority of patients, though other measures of post-operative stability including central corneal thickness, effective lens position and visual acuity can require up to 4 weeks to stabilize. Thus a conservative and pragmatic approach may be to wait until 4 weeks post-operatively prior to obtaining refractive correction following uncomplicated phacoemulsification cataract surgery.

Highlights

  • Cataract surgery is the definitive management for vision-obscuring cataracts, and can correct lifelong refractive errors in myopic, hyperopic or astigmatic patients [1]

  • This study was approved by the University of Calgary Conjoint Health Research Ethics Boards (CHREB) under protocol number

  • Cataract surgery was performed under topical anesthetic using a clear corneal 2.2 mm temporal incision followed by phacoemulsification and intracapsular insertion of intraocular lens (IOL)

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Summary

Introduction

Cataract surgery is the definitive management for vision-obscuring cataracts, and can correct lifelong refractive errors in myopic, hyperopic or astigmatic patients [1]. This change in refractive status of the eye is. Some guidelines recommend delaying refractive correction until four to 6 weeks post-operatively [4], likely based on previous large-incision iterations of cataract surgeries, which could require substantial post-surgical healing [5, 6]. Increasing confidence in early post-surgical refractive results will allow ophthalmological surgeons to improved outcomes for patients without burdening them with excessive intervals between surgeries, or delayed return to emmetropic correction. This study was undertaken to supplement the existing literature regarding refractive stabilization, and evaluate multiple contributing factors that could dissuade clinicians from confidently correcting refractive error in the early post-operative course following routine cataract surgeries

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