Paired arcuate keratotomy. A surgical approach to mixed and myopic astigmatism
R. J. Duffey, V. N. Jain, H. Tchah, R. F. Hofmann and R. L. Lindstrom
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455.
Twenty-five cadaver eyes were used to study the effect of paired arcuate
keratotomy on corneal astigmatic changes. Paired arcuate incisions placed
at optical zones of 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 mm were progressively lengthened from
45 degrees to 60 degrees, 90 degrees, and, finally, 120 degrees. The
corneal flattening in the meridian centered over the incisions and the
corneal steepening 90 degrees away were quantified with each successive
lengthening. Linear regression analysis showed a direct linear relationship
of corneal astigmatic change (sum of corneal flattening and steepening, or
delta K) to decreasing optical zone size as measured in millimeters and
increasing incision length as measured in degrees. The delta K value ranged
from 2.65 +/- 1.07 diopters to 22.05 +/- 3.55 D. The flattening/steepening
coupling ratio mean was 1.47 +/- 0.41. Progressively longer paired arcuate
incisions produced a predictable and titratable corneal flattening in the
meridian centered over the incisions and a slightly smaller corneal
steepening 90 degrees away, making the procedure ideal for mixed
astigmatism.