Radial keratotomy


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Radial keratotomy (RK) is a refractive surgical procedure to correct myopia.

Discovery

The procedure was discovered by accident by Svyatoslav Fyodorov who removed glass from the eye of one of his patients who had been in an accident. A boy, who wore eyeglasses, fell off his bicycle and his glasses shattered on impact, with glass particles lodging in his eyes. A procedure was performed consisting of making numerous radial incisions which extended from the pupil to the periphery of the cornea in a pattern like the spokes of a wheel. After the glass was removed (by this method) and the cornea healed, he found that the patient's eyesight was significantly improved.http://elliseye.com/chapter_3.html

Procedure detail

In radial keratotomy (RK), incisions are made with a precision calibrated diamond knife. It has been found that incisions that penetrate only the superficial corneal stroma are less effective than those reaching deep into the cornea,Bashour M, Benchimol M. (2005) Myopia, Radial Keratotomy. Emedicine. Viewed 12 October 2006. and consequently incisions are made quite deep. One study cites incisions made to a depth equivalent to the thinnest of four corneal-thickness measurements made near the centre of the cornea.Waring G, Moffitt S, Gelender H, Laibson P, Lindstrom R, Myers W, Obstbaum S, Rowsey J, Safir A, Schanzlin D, Bourque L. (1983) ‘Rationale for and design of the National Eye Institute Prospective Evaluation of Radial Keratotomy (PERK) Study’. Ophthalmology 90(1):40-58 Other sources cite surgeries leaving 20 to 50 micrometres of corneal tissue unincised (roughly equivalent to 90% of corneal depth based on thickness norms).Arcuate keratotomy is still popular to correct astigmatism. It is also done with a diamond knife but in these cases, cuts are made circumferentially, parallel to the edge of the cornea.

Postsurgical healing

The healing corneal wounds are comprised of newly abutting corneal stroma as well as fibroblastic cells and irregular fibrous tissue. Closer to the wound surface lies the epithelial plug, a bed of the cells that form the normal corneal epithelium, which have fallen into the wound. Often this plug is three to four times as deep as the normal corneal epithelium layer. As the cells migrate from the depth of the plug up to the surface, some die before reaching the surface, forming breaches in the otherwise healthy epithelial layer. This consequently leaves the cornea more susceptible to infection.Bergmanson J, Farmer E. (1999) ‘A Return to Primitive Practice? Radial Keratotomy Revisited’. Contact Lens and Anterior Eye 22(1):2-10Bergmanson J, Farmer E, Goosey J. (2001) ‘Epithelial plugs in radial keratotomy: the origin of incisional keratitis?’ Cornea 20(8):866-72Deg J, Zavala E, Binder P. (1985) ‘Delayed corneal wound healing following radial keratotomy’. Ophthalmology 92(6):734-40, This risk is estimated to be between 0.25%Waring G, Lynn M, McDonnell P. (1994) ‘Results of the prospective evaluation of radial keratotomy (PERK) study 10 years after surgery’. Arch Ophthalmol 112:1298-1308 and 0.7%Holler K, Darin J, Pettit T, Hofbaner J, Elander R, Levenson J. (1983) ‘Three years experience with radial keratotomy: the UCIA study’. Ophthalmology 90:627-636 Healing of the RK incisions is very slow and unpredictable, often incomplete even years after surgery.Binder P, Nayak S, Deg J, Zavala E, Sugar J. (1987) ‘An ultrastructural and histochemical study of long-term wound healing after radial keratotomy’. Am J Ophthalmol 15;103(3 Pt 2):432-40. Similarly, infection of these chronic wounds can also occur years after surgery,McClellan K, Bernard P, Gregory-Roberts J, Billson F. (1988) ‘Suppurative Keratitis: a late complication of radial keratotomy’. J Cataract Refract Surg 14:317-320Mandelbaum S, Waring G, Forster R, Culbertson W, Rowsey J and Espinal M. (1986) ‘Late development of ulcerative keratitis in radial keratotomy scars’. Arch Ophthalmology 104:1156-1160Wilhelmus K, Hanburg S. (1983) ‘Bacterial Keratitis following Radial Keratotomy’. Cornea 2:143-6 with 53% of ocular infections being 'late' in onset.Jain S, Azar D. (1996) ‘Eye infections after refractive keratotomy’. J Refract Surg 12:148-155 The pathogen most commonly involved in such infections is the highly virulent bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa.Heidemann D, Dunn S, Chow C. (1999) ‘Early- versus late-onset infectious keratitis after radial and astigmatic keratotomy: clinical spectrum in a referral practice’. J Cataract Refract Surg 25(12):1615-9.

Side effects

Large epithelial plugs may cause more scattering of light, leading to symptoms of flare and 'starbursts'. This can happen especially in situations like night driving, where the stark glare of car headlights abounds. These dark conditions cause the pupil to dilate, maximizing the amount of scattered light that enters the eye. In cases where large epithelial plugs lead to such aggravating symptoms, patients may seek further surgical treatment to alleviate the symptoms.Increasing altitude can cause partial blindness in radial keratotomy patients, as discovered by mountaineer Beck Weathers (who had had the surgery) during the 1996 Mount Everest disaster.


Next Page


This article is based on an article from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and is available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
In the Wikipedia there is a list with all authors of this article available.