Abstract

To determine through a feasibility study whether anterior and posterior corneal arc length and cross-sectional area measured using anterior segment ocular coherence tomography (AS-OCT) can distinguish between healthy and keratoconic corneas. Patients diagnosed with keratoconus along with healthy controls underwent AS-OCT. ImageJ was used to determine the central 6mm anterior and posterior corneal arc lengths and cross-sectional areas. Each length and area was then divided into 1-mm segment and relative differences compared. Twenty-five eyes from 15 patients with keratoconus, along with 25 eyes from 14 healthy controls were enrolled. There was a statistically significant difference in anterior and posterior corneal arc lengths as well as corneal cross-sectional area (p = 0.006, p = 0.005, p = 0.01, respectively). When selecting for the less advanced keratoconus eye, it was noted that posterior corneal arc length was longer in the paracentral temporal segment (1003 vs. 1010µm, p = 0.04) and that greater change in corneal cross-sectional areas occurred between adjacent segments in less advanced keratoconus eyes. AS-OCT is capable of reliably measuring corneal arc lengths in patients with keratoconus and healthy patients. Both anterior and posterior corneal arc lengths along with central cross-sectional areas are statistically different between healthy and keratoconus eyes.

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