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Penetrating Keratoplasty for Pseudophakic Corneal Edema With Exchange of Intraocular Lenses

81

Citations

26

References

1987

Year

Abstract

We studied one eye in each of 25 consecutive patients with pseudophakic corneal edema. Each patient underwent a penetrating keratoplasty with exchange of intraocular lenses and was followed up for 12 to 38 months (mean, 18.7 months). The corneal graft remained clear in 22 (88%) eyes, but only eight eyes (32%) had acuity of 20/40 or better; nine eyes (36%) manifested cystoid macular edema, and six eyes (24%) had degenerative maculopathy. Elevated intraocular pressure was present in 12 eyes after surgery, with three eyes manifesting visual field loss; in all eyes the condition was controlled medically. Peripheral anterior synechiae appeared postoperatively in two eyes. We now treat severe cases of pseudophakic corneal edema with a penetrating keratoplasty, meticulous anterior vitrectomy, gonioplasty, iridoplasty, and exchange of intraocular lenses, employing a flexible-loop anterior chamber lens or a posterior chamber lens sutured to the iris.

References

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