Central Corneal Thickness Measurements by Ultrasound, Orbscan II, and Visante OCT After LASIK for Myopia

PURPOSE
To compare central corneal thickness measurements obtained with Orbscan II scanning slit topography, Visante optical coherence tomography (OCT), and ultrasound pachymetry in myopic eyes after LASIK.

METHODS
This retrospective study included 34 consecutive patients (68 eyes) who underwent LASIK for the correction of myopia. Six months after surgery, central corneal thickness measurements were obtained using ultrasound pachymetry, Orbscan scanning slit topography, and Visante OCT. Data were analyzed using paired sample t test, Bland and Altman plot, and linear regression.

RESULTS
Average postoperative central corneal thickness was 436.65±43.82 µm for ultrasound pachymetry, 422.84±51.04 µm for Orbscan (0.89 acoustic equivalent correction factor), and 422.26±42.46 µm for Visante. Compared to the ultrasound measurement, Orbscan and Visante measurements significantly underestimated the corneal thickness by 13.81±17.34 µm (P<.01) and 14.38±10.13 µm (P<.01), respectively.

CONCLUSIONS
Both Orbscan and Visante OCT underestimated central corneal thickness compared to ultrasound pachymetry 6 months after LASIK, although measurements obtained with Visante OCT had better agreement and correlation with ultrasound pachymetry than with Orbscan.

Sponsored by

The Malyugin ring is least helpful in which of the following cases:




 
advertisement

Upcoming Events

Newsletters













Write For Us

OphthalmologyWeb wants to hear from you. Submit your case studies, clinical pearls, practice management tips, editorial, or other manuscripts.

Learn more about writing