Photogrammetric analysis of corneal trephination
S. C. Pflugfelder, T. J. Roussel, D. Denham, W. Feuer, S. Mandelbaum and J. M. Parel
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Miami, School of Medicine, FL.
We used a high-magnification shadow photogrammetric system to evaluate
corneal buttons trephined from human donor globes. Whole eyes were
trephined with one of five instruments: nonguarded blades held by hand or
placed on a handle, Barraquer-Mateus motorized trephine, Hessberg-Barron
suction trephine, or Hanna microkeratotrephine. Corneoscleral buttons were
punched with one of three punches: Cottingham, Katena Lieberman guillotine,
or a modified Lieberman guillotine with an increased impact force (BPEI 2).
The precision (how closely buttons approximated the trephine diameter),
accuracy (repeatability), acircularity (deviation from roundness), and
straightness (verticality of edges) of cut were calculated from the
diameter and edge profile angle measurements of buttons cut by the
different instruments. These results were statistically compared. The Hanna
microkeratotrephine instrument had the greatest precision and accuracy,
least acircularity, and straightest edges. Of the corneal punches
evaluated, the Cottingham instrument had the greatest precision; however,
the BPEI 2 punch cut with the greatest accuracy and the straightest edges.