A A Antonov, E A Klinicheva, A V Volzhanin, A S Makarova
{"title":"[Effect of refractive surgery on Maklakov tonometry results].","authors":"A A Antonov, E A Klinicheva, A V Volzhanin, A S Makarova","doi":"10.17116/oftalma202414002251","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Purpose: </strong>The study investigates the influence of changes in keratometric parameters after refractive surgery on the results of Maklakov tonometry.</p><p><strong>Material and methods: </strong>The study examined a total of 61 people (121 eyes). The patients were divided into a control group with no history of surgery (16 people, 31 eyes), a LASIK group (13 people, 26 eyes), a femtosecond-assisted LASIK (FS-LASIK) group (16 people, 32 eyes), and a photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) group (16 people, 32 eyes). The patients underwent standard examination, keratometry (Km), Maklakov tonometry with a 10 g weight, and elastotonometry with 5, 7.5, and 15 g weights.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>In the LASIK group, the indentation diameter with 5 and 7.5 g weights correlated with Km in the central and near-paracentral zone (<i>r</i>=0.3-0.5). Tonometry with a 10 g weight did not correlate with anything. Tonometry with a 15 g weight inversely correlated with Km in the paracentral points (4 mm) of the strong meridian (<i>r</i>= -0.5 ... -0.7). In the FS-LASIK group, a significant inverse correlation with Km was observed only for the indentation diameter with a 10 g weight in the paracentral (3-4 mm) zone (<i>r</i>= -0.4 ... -0.5). In the PRK group, weak (<i>r</i><0.4) correlations were found between Km and the indentation diameter of the 7.5 and 10 g weights for the central zone (1-2 mm). No significant correlations were found for 5 and 15 g weights.</p><p><p>In the control group, there were practically no correlations for 5 and 7.5 g weights. The indentation diameter of the 10 g weight evenly correlated with Km at all points (<i>r</i>= -0.38 ... -0.60), the indentation of the 15 g weight correlated mainly with the curvature of the horizontal meridian (<i>r</i>= -0.37 ... -0.49).</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Tonometry readings with the 10 g weight are the most dependent on Km in different groups, and the readings with the 5 g weight are the least dependent. LASIK is characterized by the largest scatter of dependencies for weights of different masses, FS-LASIK - by the smallest. Tonometry readings with the 5 g weight correlated with Km only in the LASIK group, and this was the only direct correlation. Considering the inverse nature of most correlations, higher Km may be associated with an overestimation of tonometry results, and lower Km - with its underestimation.</p>","PeriodicalId":23529,"journal":{"name":"Vestnik oftalmologii","volume":"140 2. Vyp. 2","pages":"51-59"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Vestnik oftalmologii","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.17116/oftalma202414002251","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Medicine","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: The study investigates the influence of changes in keratometric parameters after refractive surgery on the results of Maklakov tonometry.
Material and methods: The study examined a total of 61 people (121 eyes). The patients were divided into a control group with no history of surgery (16 people, 31 eyes), a LASIK group (13 people, 26 eyes), a femtosecond-assisted LASIK (FS-LASIK) group (16 people, 32 eyes), and a photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) group (16 people, 32 eyes). The patients underwent standard examination, keratometry (Km), Maklakov tonometry with a 10 g weight, and elastotonometry with 5, 7.5, and 15 g weights.
Results: In the LASIK group, the indentation diameter with 5 and 7.5 g weights correlated with Km in the central and near-paracentral zone (r=0.3-0.5). Tonometry with a 10 g weight did not correlate with anything. Tonometry with a 15 g weight inversely correlated with Km in the paracentral points (4 mm) of the strong meridian (r= -0.5 ... -0.7). In the FS-LASIK group, a significant inverse correlation with Km was observed only for the indentation diameter with a 10 g weight in the paracentral (3-4 mm) zone (r= -0.4 ... -0.5). In the PRK group, weak (r<0.4) correlations were found between Km and the indentation diameter of the 7.5 and 10 g weights for the central zone (1-2 mm). No significant correlations were found for 5 and 15 g weights.
In the control group, there were practically no correlations for 5 and 7.5 g weights. The indentation diameter of the 10 g weight evenly correlated with Km at all points (r= -0.38 ... -0.60), the indentation of the 15 g weight correlated mainly with the curvature of the horizontal meridian (r= -0.37 ... -0.49).
Conclusion: Tonometry readings with the 10 g weight are the most dependent on Km in different groups, and the readings with the 5 g weight are the least dependent. LASIK is characterized by the largest scatter of dependencies for weights of different masses, FS-LASIK - by the smallest. Tonometry readings with the 5 g weight correlated with Km only in the LASIK group, and this was the only direct correlation. Considering the inverse nature of most correlations, higher Km may be associated with an overestimation of tonometry results, and lower Km - with its underestimation.
期刊介绍:
The journal publishes materials on the diagnosis and treatment of eye diseases, hygiene of vision, prevention of ophthalmic affections, history of Russian ophthalmology, organization of ophthalmological aid to the population, as well as the problems of special equipment. Original scientific articles and surveys on urgent problems of theory and practice of Russian and foreign ophthalmology are published. The journal contains book reviews on ophthalmology, information on the activities of ophthalmologists" scientific societies, chronicle of congresses and conferences.The journal is intended for ophthalmologists and scientific workers dealing with clinical problems of diseases of the eye and physiology of vision.