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Comparing Rod-Mediated Dark Adaptation in Older Adults before and after Cataract Surgery.

Authors :
Tanaya, Tarushi
Swain, Thomas A.
Clark, Mark E.
Swanner, Jason C.
Lolley, Virginia R.
Callahan, Michael A.
McGwin Jr, Gerald
Owsley, Cynthia
Source :
Current Eye Research; May2023, Vol. 48 Issue 5, p512-517, 6p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Studies on age-related macular degeneration often use rod-mediated dark adaptation (RMDA) to evaluate macular functional health, studying eyes with cataract and pseudophakic eyes within the same sample. We examine a poorly understood issue—whether rod intercept time (RIT), a measure of RMDA, changes after cataract surgery and intraocular lens (IOL) insertion as compared to RIT before cataract surgery. Cataract may serve as a filter reducing photo-bleach magnitude prior to surgery, biasing RMDA interpretation. A pre-/post-cataract surgery design was used. Persons with nuclear sclerotic and/or cortical cataract per the electronic health record were enrolled. Prior to cataract surgery, visual acuity, RMDA, and the LOCS III classification documenting cataract presence/severity were measured. Thirty days after surgery (mean), visual acuity and RMDA were repeated, followed by fundus photos to document macular health. Twenty-four participants (mean age 72.7 years, standard deviation 5.6) enrolled. All eyes had nuclear sclerotic and nuclear color cataract; 68% had cortical cataract. All IOLs were monofocal with 21 having blue blocking characteristics and 3 had clear IOLs. Most eyes had higher RIT post-surgery (15.6 min, SD 6.7) as compared to pre-surgery (13.7 min, SD 6.4), p = 0.0006, meaning that RMDA was slower post-surgery. Eyes with moderate cataract (<4 on any LOCS III grade) had RIT that increased on average by 0.7 min; those with more advanced cataract (≥4) had RIT that increased by 3.1 min (p = 0.0116). Results were unchanged when clear IOLs were removed from analysis. RMDA was significantly slower (RIT was greater) following cataract surgery, with the greatest impact on RIT in older eyes after surgery for more advanced cataract. These findings suggest that persons with more advanced cataract may bias results when evaluating RMDA using RIT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02713683
Volume :
48
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Current Eye Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163192539
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/02713683.2023.2171438