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Clinical utility of irx3 in keratoconus

Authors :
Maria, Markoulli
Cathleen, Fedtke
Minas, Coroneo
Michael, Kalloniatis
Andrew, Whatham
Michael, Yapp
Barbara, Zangerl
Source :
Clinicalexperimental optometry. 104(1)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Diagnosis and monitoring of keratoconus is increasingly being conducted with the aid of imaging equipment such as corneal aberrometry. There is a need to also know the confidence with which ocular aberration measurements can be made.To assess the repeatability of lower- and higher-order aberration measurements in patients with keratoconus using the irx3 wavefront aberrometer (Imagine Eyes, Orsay, France) and evaluate correlations with corneal curvature.The irx3 wavefront aberrometer was used to measure bilateral lower- and higher-order ocular aberrations on 33 participants with keratoconus. Three measurements were taken from each eye to determine the repeatability of lower-order aberrations (quantified as sphere and cylinder in dioptres) and higher-order aberration co-efficients (up to eighth order in micrometres), coma, trefoil and total higher-order aberration root mean square (in micrometres). Corneal curvature was measured using the Pentacam HR system (OCULUS, Wetzlar, Germany).Repeat measurements for lower-order aberrations resulted in larger co-efficients of repeatability than higher-order aberrations. Similarly, larger co-efficients of repeatability between repeated measures across all Zernike co-efficients were observed in eyes with severe keratoconus (that is, corneal curvature 52-D) compared to eyes with flatter corneas. The difference between repeated measures tended to be significant for the lower-order aberrations regardless of corneal curvature. The highest correlations with corneal curvature for right and left eyes respectively, were identified for total higher-order aberration root mean square (r = 0.92, p 0.001 and r = 0.91, p 0.001), followed closely by coma (r = -0.93, p 0.001 and r = -0.86, p 0.001) and the Z (3, -1) co-efficient (r = -0.92, p 0.001 and r = -0.86, p 0.001 for right and left eyes, respectively).Lower-order aberrations tended to be less repeatable, indicating that instrument variability must be considered when monitoring progression. Total higher-order aberration root mean square and third-order aberrations, in particular the vertical coma Z (3, -1) co-efficient, demonstrated a stronger correlation with corneal curvature than the lower-order aberrations.

Details

ISSN :
14440938
Volume :
104
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinicalexperimental optometry
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........6391adcbfcf16bbe99cb2baee93428f6