Abstract

This study investigates the changes in anterior chamber angle configuration and IOP level before and after cataract surgery in primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) eyes, and assesses its possible relationship with the axial length of the eye. The study included 38 patients with immature senile cataract and compensated unoperated stage I-II POAG. Patients underwent anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) with measurement of the angle opening distance (AOD750) and trabecular-iris space area (TISA750) before and six weeks after the surgery, as well as axial length and corneal-compensated IOP (IOPcc). After the surgery 92.11% of patients showed a decrease in IOPcc an average of 1.84±1.95 mm Hg (by 12.33±10.21% of the baseline); the maximum decrease in the IOPcc level was 8.35 mm Hg (by 40.97% of the baseline). AS-OCT data indicates that cataract phacoemulsification causes an increase in anterior chamber angle width: AOD750 increased from 0.510±0.175 to 0.771±0.156 mm, and TISA750 increased from 0.266±0.090 to 0.494±0.096 mm2. The strongest correlations were found between the axial length, postoperative TISA750 increase (Δ%TISA750) and postoperative IOPcc reduction (Δ% IOPcc). Postoperatively, specific changes could be observed in the trabecular meshwork in 28.95% of cases in the form of elongation and strain of the membrane. Cataract extraction contributes to a significant reduction in IOP due to anterior chamber angle expansion, trabecular meshwork stretching, and improved aqueous outflow.

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