Refraktive Chirurgie im Kindesalter

Standard

Refraktive Chirurgie im Kindesalter. / Ryseck, Ilona; Wahl, Birgit; Lischka, Thomas; Hassenstein, Andrea.

Schlaglicht Augenheilkunde: Linse, Katarakt und refraktive Chirurgie. ed. / Thomas Kohnen. 1. ed. Deutschland : Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2016. p. 314-319.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to book/anthologySCORING: Contribution to collected editions/anthologiesEducation

Harvard

Ryseck, I, Wahl, B, Lischka, T & Hassenstein, A 2016, Refraktive Chirurgie im Kindesalter. in T Kohnen (ed.), Schlaglicht Augenheilkunde: Linse, Katarakt und refraktive Chirurgie. 1 edn, Georg Thieme Verlag KG, Deutschland, pp. 314-319.

APA

Ryseck, I., Wahl, B., Lischka, T., & Hassenstein, A. (2016). Refraktive Chirurgie im Kindesalter. In T. Kohnen (Ed.), Schlaglicht Augenheilkunde: Linse, Katarakt und refraktive Chirurgie (1 ed., pp. 314-319). Georg Thieme Verlag KG.

Vancouver

Ryseck I, Wahl B, Lischka T, Hassenstein A. Refraktive Chirurgie im Kindesalter. In Kohnen T, editor, Schlaglicht Augenheilkunde: Linse, Katarakt und refraktive Chirurgie. 1 ed. Deutschland: Georg Thieme Verlag KG. 2016. p. 314-319

Bibtex

@inbook{cfa42aeff71b41009579058525ce1ca4,
title = "Refraktive Chirurgie im Kindesalter",
abstract = "BACKGROUND:A so-called myopic shift after cataract extraction and IOL implantation is known to occur in children. How much is difficult to predict. In this study we report the refractive development in pseudophakic children after primary and secondary IOL implantation.METHODS:The refractive change in all patients receiving an IOL-implantation between 2000 and 2008 with a follow-up of a minimum of 6 months was reviewed (6 - 107 months). Rigid or foldable lenses were implanted by the same technique. Refraction postoperatively and at last follow-up was measured. 62 eyes of 41 patients were reviewed. Patients were divided into three groups based on age at time of surgery: 3 - 4 years, 5 - 6 years and 7 - 12 years.RESULTS:The mean myopic shift was 2.5 D in both study groups, patients with primary and secondary IOL implantation. In the group with 3 - 4-year-old children mean myopic shift was 1.5 D in primary and 1.0 D in secondary implantations, in the group with 5 - 6-year-old children 2.75 D in primary and 3.25 D in secondary implantations and in the group with 7 - 12-year-old children 2.0 D in both primary and secondary implanted IOLs.CONCLUSIONS:We have shown that there are no differences in refractive changes between primary and secondary IOL implantations in our study group. In contrast to other findings we found the lowest myopic shift in the group of 3 - 4-year-old patients. Our results show that a prediction of expected myopic shift in children after IOL implantations remains difficult.",
author = "Ilona Ryseck and Birgit Wahl and Thomas Lischka and Andrea Hassenstein",
year = "2016",
month = jul,
day = "1",
language = "Deutsch",
isbn = "978-3-13-203101-02",
pages = "314--319",
editor = "Thomas Kohnen",
booktitle = "Schlaglicht Augenheilkunde",
publisher = "Georg Thieme Verlag KG",
address = "Deutschland",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Refraktive Chirurgie im Kindesalter

AU - Ryseck, Ilona

AU - Wahl, Birgit

AU - Lischka, Thomas

AU - Hassenstein, Andrea

PY - 2016/7/1

Y1 - 2016/7/1

N2 - BACKGROUND:A so-called myopic shift after cataract extraction and IOL implantation is known to occur in children. How much is difficult to predict. In this study we report the refractive development in pseudophakic children after primary and secondary IOL implantation.METHODS:The refractive change in all patients receiving an IOL-implantation between 2000 and 2008 with a follow-up of a minimum of 6 months was reviewed (6 - 107 months). Rigid or foldable lenses were implanted by the same technique. Refraction postoperatively and at last follow-up was measured. 62 eyes of 41 patients were reviewed. Patients were divided into three groups based on age at time of surgery: 3 - 4 years, 5 - 6 years and 7 - 12 years.RESULTS:The mean myopic shift was 2.5 D in both study groups, patients with primary and secondary IOL implantation. In the group with 3 - 4-year-old children mean myopic shift was 1.5 D in primary and 1.0 D in secondary implantations, in the group with 5 - 6-year-old children 2.75 D in primary and 3.25 D in secondary implantations and in the group with 7 - 12-year-old children 2.0 D in both primary and secondary implanted IOLs.CONCLUSIONS:We have shown that there are no differences in refractive changes between primary and secondary IOL implantations in our study group. In contrast to other findings we found the lowest myopic shift in the group of 3 - 4-year-old patients. Our results show that a prediction of expected myopic shift in children after IOL implantations remains difficult.

AB - BACKGROUND:A so-called myopic shift after cataract extraction and IOL implantation is known to occur in children. How much is difficult to predict. In this study we report the refractive development in pseudophakic children after primary and secondary IOL implantation.METHODS:The refractive change in all patients receiving an IOL-implantation between 2000 and 2008 with a follow-up of a minimum of 6 months was reviewed (6 - 107 months). Rigid or foldable lenses were implanted by the same technique. Refraction postoperatively and at last follow-up was measured. 62 eyes of 41 patients were reviewed. Patients were divided into three groups based on age at time of surgery: 3 - 4 years, 5 - 6 years and 7 - 12 years.RESULTS:The mean myopic shift was 2.5 D in both study groups, patients with primary and secondary IOL implantation. In the group with 3 - 4-year-old children mean myopic shift was 1.5 D in primary and 1.0 D in secondary implantations, in the group with 5 - 6-year-old children 2.75 D in primary and 3.25 D in secondary implantations and in the group with 7 - 12-year-old children 2.0 D in both primary and secondary implanted IOLs.CONCLUSIONS:We have shown that there are no differences in refractive changes between primary and secondary IOL implantations in our study group. In contrast to other findings we found the lowest myopic shift in the group of 3 - 4-year-old patients. Our results show that a prediction of expected myopic shift in children after IOL implantations remains difficult.

M3 - SCORING: Beitrag in Sammelwerk

SN - 978-3-13-203101-02

SP - 314

EP - 319

BT - Schlaglicht Augenheilkunde

A2 - Kohnen, Thomas

PB - Georg Thieme Verlag KG

CY - Deutschland

ER -