Refractive Corneal Lenticule Extraction on Previous Photorefractive Keratectomy, with Optical Coherence Tomography Study

Case Rep Ophthalmol. 2022 Oct 27;13(3):793. doi: 10.1159/000527331. eCollection 2022 Sep-Dec.

Abstract

We report the first case of refractive corneal lenticule extraction with the femtosecond laser application CLEAR as retreatment technique after previous laser vision correction. A 42-year-old woman, operated by bilateral photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) 19 years previously, with moderate dry eye, came for post-PRK regression and underwent correction of a residual myopia of -3 -0.5 × 159° D in the left eye by CLEAR. Surgery was uneventful, with a regular laser pattern and a normal dissection of the lenticule. At day 1, uncorrected visual acuity was 20/25; at 3 months, it was 20/20, with a refraction of +0.25 × 115° D. The cornea and interface were regular and transparent; no dry eye symptoms occurred. At 3 months, on optical coherence tomography, the treatment was well centered, the surgical interface was centrally regular, whereas the anterior profile of the stromal surface was slightly corrugated, compensated by a smooth epithelial surface. The present case demonstrates that myopia after PRK can be achieved by CLEAR; an irregular stromal surface may occur, not affecting the visual result in virtue of epithelial remodeling.

Keywords: Myopia; Optical coherence tomography; Photorefractive keratectomy; Refractive corneal lenticule extraction.

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  • Case Reports

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