Abstract
Purpose
To evaluate quantitative relationships between biometric measurements and expected intraocular pressure reduction following phacoemulsification.
Design
A prospective, comparative clinical study.
Methods
Forty nine candidates for phacoemulsification were included. Intraocular pressure was measured preoperatively and after 7 and 30 days. Ocular biometrics were measured using optical biometry and ultrasound biomicroscopy preoperatively and 1 month postoperatively.
Results
Patients were sub-grouped into open-angle glaucoma (12 eyes), angle-closure glaucoma (18 eyes), and cataract-only groups (19 eyes). The mean intraocular pressure reduction was −1.67 ± 2.73, −13.11 ± 7.98, and −7.50 ± 3.58 mmHg in the cataract-only, angle-closure glaucoma, and open-angle glaucoma groups (p = 0.001). The delta-intraocular pressure at day 7 showed positive correlations with lens vault and relative-lens vault (p = 0.005 and 0.001). It showed negative correlations with lens position, relative-lens position, anterior chamber depth, aqueous depth, and nasal and temporal angles in addition to lens thickness, anterior vault, nasal trabeculo-ciliary angle, and temporal-trabeculo-ciliary angle at the end of the follow-up period. Regression analysis revealed significant associations between preoperative intraocular pressure and both nasal-trabeculo-ciliary angle and anterior vault (p = 0.038 and 0.019) and delta-intraocular pressure and both nasal-trabeculo-ciliary angle and relative-lens vault (p = 0.001 and ≤0.001) with an area under the curve of 0.71 for relative-lens vault. For every degree decrease in nasal-trabeculo-ciliary angle, there was an expected 0.33 mmHg intraocular pressure reduction with no expected change if nasal-trabeculo-ciliary angle decreased to <22°.
Conclusions
The relationship between anterior-segment-biometrics could determine intraocular pressure behavior after phacoemulsification. The preoperative nasal-trabeculo-ciliary angle and relative-lens vault could be significant predictors for postoperative intraocular pressure reduction.
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