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Khalid M. Al-Arfaj, MD. Phacoemulsification some Basic Ideas…. Dammam University . 1-Quiz …. 2- lecture …. 3-Vedio …. Basic Phaco Settings. Basic Phaco Settings. Sculpting. 60 / 80 / 24 US, Vac, Asp . Quadrant Removal/Burst. 45 / 400 / 37 BW 50 - 120. Quadrant Removal/Pulse.
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Khalid M. Al-Arfaj, MD Phacoemulsification some Basic Ideas… Dammam University
1-Quiz … 2- lecture … 3-Vedio …
Basic Phaco Settings Sculpting • 60 / 80 / 24 • US, Vac, Asp.
Quadrant Removal/Burst • 45 / 400 / 37 BW 50 - 120
Quadrant Removal/Pulse • 45 / 376 / 35 PR 6
Vertical Choping Courtesy of David Chang, MD
Evolution of IOL Calculation Formulas • Clinical History Formula • Used before 1975 • Simple formula to calculate IOL power • P = 18 + (1.25 x Ref) • Poor accuracy • >50% had >1D error • “9 D surprise”– some huge errors due to the inaccuracy of calculating refractive error prior to cataract formation
Formulas and Their Derivations • Regression Formulas • Derived from retrospective computer analysis of postoperative data from a large number of patients • SRK Formula • P = A – 2.5L – 0.9K • Derived by Sanders, Retzlaff and Kraff1 • Required measurements • L – Axial length (mm) • K – Corneal power (D) • A – A Constant 1 Sanders DR, Retzlaff J, Kraff MC. Arch Ophthalmol 1983;101:965-967
Formulas and Their Derivations • SRK and early Theoretical formulas fairly accurate for eyes of moderate length • Inaccuracies occurred at extremes of axial length
Modern Theoretical Formulas • Most important concept is postop Anterior Chamber Depth is related to IOL placement in the eye, not to preop ACD • All have a personalizable factor to improve accuracy of calculations • Holladay/Holladay 2 • S factor– personalized surgeon factor • SRK/T • A constant– based on multiple variables (IOL manufacturer, implant style, surgeon’s technique, etc.) • Hoffer Q • Personalized ACD value
Modern Theoretical Formulas • All based on Thin Lens Optics
Modern Theoretical Formulas Modern Theoretical Formulas • Found to be more accurate than older formulas • All basically the same in predicting IOL power in average eyes • Differences occur at extremes of AL and K’s • Personalized factors based on optimal cases (PCIOL, intact capsule) • Must change when surgical plan changes (Sulcus PCIOL or ACIOL)
Axial Length Measurement • Current methods • Contact A Scan Biometry • Optical Biometry • Partial Coherence Interferometry
A Scan Biometry • Use of A scan ultrasound to measure axial length • Contact
Normal Phakic Contact A Scan • C1 – Anterior surface of Cornea • C2 – Posterior surface of Cornea • L1 – Anterior surface of Lens • L2 – Posterior surface of Lens • R – Retina
Optical Coherence Biometer • IOL Master • Fine beam of infrared laser used to measure axial length
ultrasound vs. optical biometry Ultrasound A-Scan 10MHz sound wave IOLMaster 780nm laser beam ILM RPE averaging across foveal cup reflection at Bruch's membrane • Foveal thickness is about 150µ (±20) from ages 10 to 80 years. • The parafoveal area is between 0.10 mm and 0.16 mm thicker.
Ultrasound A-Scan 10MHz sound wave ? ? fixation blob ? ? ? ? ? IOLMaster 780nm laser beam fixation point alignment precision: ultrasound vs. optical A-scan US does not measure to the exact center of the fovea, but samples an area around it due to the broad angle of the U/S beam and fixation light. IOLMaster uses a point fixation light, measures along visual axis to the RPE at foveal center and then adds back the foveal thickness.
partial coherence interferometrynon-contact laser devicephakic, pseudophakic, phakic IOLsposterior staphyloma, silicone oilnot limited by wavelengthor retinal thickness variations applanation A-scan falsely short axial length variable corneal compression corneal micro-abrasions highly operator dependent source of IOL power errors myopia myopia hyperopia hyperopia -2.0 -1.00.0 1.0 2.0 -0.50.00.5 Comparison of three methods 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% spherical equivalent prediction error (D) Data courtesy of Warren E. Hill, MD, FACS
Pearls and Pitfalls • Measure axial length of both eyes • Take multiple readings of each to assure accuracy • Compare eyes • Shouldn’t be a significant disparity in axial lengths unless a significant difference in refraction • Axial Length • measure too short - myopic surprise • measure too long - hyperopic surprise • Normal Eye: 1.0 mm error 2.5 to 3.0 D surprise • Short Eye: 1.0 mm error 7.5 D surprise • Keratometry • 1D curvature error 1D surprise
IOL Power Selection • What is your target postop refraction? • Examine patient data • Discuss with patient • Match other eye? • Monovision? • Binocular distance? • Binocular near?
IOL Choices • How do you choose IOL? • Material • Silicone • Acrylic • PMMA • Configuration • One piece • Three piece • Delivery system • Fold vs. Inject
Haptic Edge Optic Basic IOL Design Features
Haptic 1-piece 3-piece diameter Edge Optic Basic IOL Design Features
Haptic Design 1 • 13.0
Haptic Edge square rounded Optic Basic IOL Design Features
Square reduced PCO dysphotopsias? Rounded anterior reduced PCO reduced internal reflections Edge Design
Material Rigid PMMA Foldable acrylic silicone collamer Focality/Sphericity Monofocal spheric toric wavefront aspheric Multifocal accomodative pseudoaccomodative Optic Design • Diameter • 5.0 to 7.0 mm • 6.0
Which lens? • Consider matching IOL design features with individual patient needs
Lens choice • High myopia • Considerations: IOL size, power • longer haptic span, larger optic diameter • low power
Lens choice • High hyperopia • Considerations: IOL size, power • smaller haptic span, smaller optic diameter • high power IOL
Lens choice • Presbyopia • Considerations: spectacle independence • multifocal IOL (accomodative, pseudoaccomodative) • monovision using two monofocal IOLs
Lens choice • Astigmatism (corneal) • Considerations: correct corneal astigmatism • Toric IOL
Lens choice • Improved functional vision • Considerations: maximize contrast sensitivity aspheric
Lens choice • Macular degeneration • Considerations: block toxic UV light • blue blocking chromophore
Lens choice • Pseudoexfoliation • Considerations: Long term zonular stability • avoid silicone material (capsular phimosis)
Crystalens “ Accommodating” Lens –single optic
The Multifocals ReZoom & ReSTOR The good Less capsule issues Known material Good near vision The Bad: Unwanted photopsia Contrast sensitivity
Anatomy of the Apodized Diffractive IOL Step heights decrease peripherally from 1.3 – 0.2 microns Central 3.6 mm diffractive structure A +4.0 add at lens plane equaling +3.2 at spectacle plane
Patient SelectionPre-operative Exclusion Criteria • Subjective Exclusion • Hypercritical patients • Patients with unrealistic expectations • Occupational night drivers • Medical Exclusion • >1.0 D of corneal astigmatism? • Pre-existing ocular pathology • Previous refractive patients
Patient Satisfaction • Crystalens, ReZoom, and ReSTOR all have clinical studies extolling the level of spectacle independence, excellent near, intermediate, and far vision of patients with these lenses.
Future Technology The HumanOptics IOL ( 1CU) is a single optic accommodative lens continuing in clinical trials in Europe. (Image courtesy of HumanOptics, Ophthal Clinics of N. Amer. March 2006.)