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Title: Dioptric changes in eyes with reversed intraocular lenses. Author: Nawa Y, Okamoto M, Tsuji H, Ueda T, Kanzaki M, Hara Y. Journal: J Cataract Refract Surg; 2005 Mar; 31(3):586-9. PubMed ID: 15811749. Abstract: PURPOSE: To theoretically calculate refractive changes in eyes with reversed intraocular lenses (IOLs). SETTING: Nara Medical University, Nara, Japan. METHODS: With the ray-tracing method, the refractive changes in a theoretical eye model with a reversed IOL in the capsular bag were calculated. Data for 3 models, anterior biconvex (MA60AC, Alcon), posterior biconvex (MA60BM, Alcon), and convex plano (UV2565T, Menicon), were provided by the manufacturer and used in the analysis. RESULTS: Using the assumption that the axial length varied from 22 to 27 mm, the anterior-biconvex IOLs elicited small refractive changes when reversed. The posterior-biconvex IOLs elicited a significant myopic shift (up to 0.90 diopter [D]) when reversed. The convex-plano IOLs elicited a significant hyperopic shift (up to 2.01 D) when reversed. CONCLUSIONS: Anterior-biconvex IOLs with similar anterior and posterior radii of curvature will not cause large diopter surprises when reversed. High-power posterior-convex IOLs will cause significant myopic diopter surprises when reversed. Both these changes shift toward myopic if the postoperative anterior chamber depth (ACD) becomes shallow. Medium- to high-power convex-plano IOLs will cause a large hyperopic shift when reversed. This hyperopic shift decreases if the postoperative ACD becomes shallower.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]