Acta Ophthalmol
Acta OphthalmolSeptember 2016Journal Article

Effect of selective laser trabeculoplasty on corneal biomechanics.

Cornea & BiomechanicsIOP & Medical Therapy

Summary

Selective laser trabeculoplasty does not change corneal biomechanical properties as measured with the ORA in already pretreated patients with glaucoma.

Abstract

PURPOSE

To evaluate the effect of selective laser trabeculoplasty (SLT) on ocular biomechanics as measured with the ocular response analyzer (ORA, AMETEK Inc. and Reichert Inc.).

METHODS

In a prospective case series, 52 eyes of 52 patients (aged 66.6 ± 9.6 years) with insufficient intraocular pressure (IOP) control despite maximum tolerated medical therapy underwent SLT (Solo(™) SLT, Ellex Inc.) for further IOP reduction. Goldmann-correlated IOP (IOPg), corneal-compensated IOP (IOPcc), corneal hysteresis (CH) and the corneal resistance factor (CRF) were measured with the ORA prior to and at least 4 weeks following SLT.

RESULTS

IOPg decreased statistically significantly from 18.0 ± 6.4 to 14.8 ± 3.8 mmHg and IOPcc from 20.2 ± 6.5 to 16.7 ± 3.4 mmHg (p < 0.001). CH increased from 8.53 ± 2.03 to 9.12 ± 1.83 mmHg (p = 0.028) and CRF decreased from 9.58 ± 2.18 to 9.1 ± 2.1 mmHg (p = 0.037), which was statistically significant. Correcting the CH and CRF data for the influence of IOP reduction with a covariance analysis, however, resulted in an unchanged CH (IOPg adjusted: p = 0.318; IOPcc adjusted: p = 0.468) and CRF (IOPg adjusted: p = 0.320; IOPcc adjusted: p = 0.464) after SLT.

CONCLUSION

Selective laser trabeculoplasty does not change corneal biomechanical properties as measured with the ORA in already pretreated patients with glaucoma. The measured increase in CH and decrease in CRF can be solely explained by IOP reduction.

Keywords

corneal hysteresiscorneal resistance factorintraocular pressureocular response analyzeropen-angle glaucomaselective laser trabeculoplasty

Discussion

Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.