Do air pressure and wind speed influence the outcome of myopic laser refractive surgery? Results from the Hamburg Weather Study

Standard

Do air pressure and wind speed influence the outcome of myopic laser refractive surgery? Results from the Hamburg Weather Study. / Neuhaus-Richard, Ines; Frings, Andreas; Ament, Felix; Görsch, Isabel Caroline; Druchkiv, Vasyl; Katz, Toam; Linke, Stephan Johannes; Richard, Gisbert.

in: INT OPHTHALMOL, Jahrgang 34, Nr. 6, 2014, S. 1249-1258.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Neuhaus-Richard, I, Frings, A, Ament, F, Görsch, IC, Druchkiv, V, Katz, T, Linke, SJ & Richard, G 2014, 'Do air pressure and wind speed influence the outcome of myopic laser refractive surgery? Results from the Hamburg Weather Study', INT OPHTHALMOL, Jg. 34, Nr. 6, S. 1249-1258. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10792-014-9923-y

APA

Neuhaus-Richard, I., Frings, A., Ament, F., Görsch, I. C., Druchkiv, V., Katz, T., Linke, S. J., & Richard, G. (2014). Do air pressure and wind speed influence the outcome of myopic laser refractive surgery? Results from the Hamburg Weather Study. INT OPHTHALMOL, 34(6), 1249-1258. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10792-014-9923-y

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{df2ddebbe20d41b48cac3a37677eda35,
title = "Do air pressure and wind speed influence the outcome of myopic laser refractive surgery? Results from the Hamburg Weather Study",
abstract = "Laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) is one of the dominant procedures for the surgical correction of refractive errors. Meteorotropic reaction has been described regarding the field of ophthalmology. This study was thus initiated to assess the impact of air pressure and wind speed on the refractive and visual outcome of LASIK in myopic eyes. Our study comprised 1,052 eyes of 1,052 consecutive myopic patients (419 males, 633 females; mean age at surgery 35.0 ± 9.0 years) with mean preoperative refractive spherical equivalent (SE) of -3.88 ± 1.85 diopters (D). Two subgroups were defined, which had undergone surgery either during meteorological winter or summer. Manifest refraction, uncorrected and corrected visual acuity were assessed pre- and post-operatively. We applied robust regression analysis with efficiency index (EI), safety index, and postoperative SE (D) as dependent variables. At the 1-month (33.0 ± 5.0 days) follow-up, the mean postoperative SE was -0.18 ± 0.44 D. Bivariate comparisons showed that statistically significant better EI was related to days with low to moderate air-pressure. This was confirmed by robust regression analysis. Moderate to high wind speed was related to more appropriate postoperative SE. No change by more than one line on logMar scale was obtained. Although being statistically significant, there is no clinically relevant difference in outcome of LASIK, which demonstrates its highly standardized quality. Prospective, longitudinal studies are warranted to address meteorotropic reactions through evaluating individual risk profiles.",
author = "Ines Neuhaus-Richard and Andreas Frings and Felix Ament and G{\"o}rsch, {Isabel Caroline} and Vasyl Druchkiv and Toam Katz and Linke, {Stephan Johannes} and Gisbert Richard",
note = "Ines Neuhaus-Richard, Autor/-in INTERN ",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1007/s10792-014-9923-y",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "1249--1258",
journal = "INT OPHTHALMOL",
issn = "0165-5701",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Do air pressure and wind speed influence the outcome of myopic laser refractive surgery? Results from the Hamburg Weather Study

AU - Neuhaus-Richard, Ines

AU - Frings, Andreas

AU - Ament, Felix

AU - Görsch, Isabel Caroline

AU - Druchkiv, Vasyl

AU - Katz, Toam

AU - Linke, Stephan Johannes

AU - Richard, Gisbert

N1 - Ines Neuhaus-Richard, Autor/-in INTERN

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) is one of the dominant procedures for the surgical correction of refractive errors. Meteorotropic reaction has been described regarding the field of ophthalmology. This study was thus initiated to assess the impact of air pressure and wind speed on the refractive and visual outcome of LASIK in myopic eyes. Our study comprised 1,052 eyes of 1,052 consecutive myopic patients (419 males, 633 females; mean age at surgery 35.0 ± 9.0 years) with mean preoperative refractive spherical equivalent (SE) of -3.88 ± 1.85 diopters (D). Two subgroups were defined, which had undergone surgery either during meteorological winter or summer. Manifest refraction, uncorrected and corrected visual acuity were assessed pre- and post-operatively. We applied robust regression analysis with efficiency index (EI), safety index, and postoperative SE (D) as dependent variables. At the 1-month (33.0 ± 5.0 days) follow-up, the mean postoperative SE was -0.18 ± 0.44 D. Bivariate comparisons showed that statistically significant better EI was related to days with low to moderate air-pressure. This was confirmed by robust regression analysis. Moderate to high wind speed was related to more appropriate postoperative SE. No change by more than one line on logMar scale was obtained. Although being statistically significant, there is no clinically relevant difference in outcome of LASIK, which demonstrates its highly standardized quality. Prospective, longitudinal studies are warranted to address meteorotropic reactions through evaluating individual risk profiles.

AB - Laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) is one of the dominant procedures for the surgical correction of refractive errors. Meteorotropic reaction has been described regarding the field of ophthalmology. This study was thus initiated to assess the impact of air pressure and wind speed on the refractive and visual outcome of LASIK in myopic eyes. Our study comprised 1,052 eyes of 1,052 consecutive myopic patients (419 males, 633 females; mean age at surgery 35.0 ± 9.0 years) with mean preoperative refractive spherical equivalent (SE) of -3.88 ± 1.85 diopters (D). Two subgroups were defined, which had undergone surgery either during meteorological winter or summer. Manifest refraction, uncorrected and corrected visual acuity were assessed pre- and post-operatively. We applied robust regression analysis with efficiency index (EI), safety index, and postoperative SE (D) as dependent variables. At the 1-month (33.0 ± 5.0 days) follow-up, the mean postoperative SE was -0.18 ± 0.44 D. Bivariate comparisons showed that statistically significant better EI was related to days with low to moderate air-pressure. This was confirmed by robust regression analysis. Moderate to high wind speed was related to more appropriate postoperative SE. No change by more than one line on logMar scale was obtained. Although being statistically significant, there is no clinically relevant difference in outcome of LASIK, which demonstrates its highly standardized quality. Prospective, longitudinal studies are warranted to address meteorotropic reactions through evaluating individual risk profiles.

U2 - 10.1007/s10792-014-9923-y

DO - 10.1007/s10792-014-9923-y

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 24562594

VL - 34

SP - 1249

EP - 1258

JO - INT OPHTHALMOL

JF - INT OPHTHALMOL

SN - 0165-5701

IS - 6

ER -