4.4 Article

Assessing the visual image quality provided by refractive corrections during keratoconus progression

Journal

OPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 358-366

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/opo.12931

Keywords

keratoconus; refractive correction; keratoconus progression; statistical eye model; rigid lens; subjective refraction

Categories

Funding

  1. Research Foundation Flanders [FWO-TBM T000416N]
  2. United States National Eye Institute [R01 EY008520, R01 EY019105, NIH P30 EY07551]

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The study expands the SyntEyes KTC model to assess the VIQ of spherical-cylindrical spectacle and rigid contact lens corrections as keratoconus progresses. Results show that as the disease progresses, the visual Strehl ratio pattern in correction space for spectacles changes from an hourglass to a shell pattern, impacting the subjective refraction and VIQ differently.
Purpose To expand the SyntEyes keratoconus (KTC) model to assess the Visual Image Quality (VIQ) of sphero-cylindrical spectacle and rigid contact lens corrections as keratoconus progresses. Methods The previously published SyntEyes KTC eye model to determine best sphero-cylindrical spectacle and rigid contact lens correction in keratoconic eyes was expanded to include the natural progression of keratoconus, thus allowing the assessment of corrected VIQ with disease progression. Results As keratoconus progresses, the pattern of visual Strehl ratio (VSX) in correction space for spectacles alters from a typical hourglass into a shell pattern. The former would guide the subjective refraction towards the optimal correction while the latter is relatively insensitive to large dioptric steps. In 15 out of the 20 SyntEyes, the shell pattern eventually produces two foci on different sides of the correction space separated by a clinically significant dioptric difference with a similar, albeit lower VIQ. Wearing the best possible spectacle corrections provided an average gain of up to 3.5 lines of logMAR visual acuity compared to the uncorrected cases, which increased to 5.5 lines for the best rigid contact lens correction. Continuing to wear a spectacle correction as the disease progresses often leads to a VIQ that is almost as bad as the uncorrected case. Continuing to wear a rigid contact lens correction as the disease progresses maintains a relatively high level of VIQ, albeit in the low range for typically well-corrected normal eyes. Conclusions The results reflect the clinical experience that subjective refraction is difficult in highly-aberrated keratoconic eyes, the benefit of spectacle correction is short lived and that rigid contact lenses provide better and more stable VIQ with disease progression. Other aspects, such as the presence and behaviour of the second focus in some cases, remain to be confirmed clinically.

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