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Perioperative intense pulsed light to prevent and improve symptoms of post-laser corneal refractive surgery dry eye. A randomized clinical trial

María C. Martínez-Hergueta, Mario Cantó-Cerdán, Virginia Amesty, María José García-Corral, Laura Casanova-Blanquer, Ana B. Plaza-Puche, Jorge L. Alió, Jorge L. Alió del Barrio

2024Asia-Pacific Journal of Ophthalmology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate the efficacy of perioperative IPL therapy in preventing postoperative ocular surface disorders in patients undergoing corneal laser refractive surgery. DESIGN: randomized, controlled, clinical trial with triple-blinding. METHODS: Setting: Vissum Miranza - Alicante; Study population: 61 patients randomized in two groups: 31 study patients (perioperative IPL + laser refractive surgery) and 30 control patients (perioperative placebo + laser refractive surgery). Follow-up was conducted over a 6-month period; Intervention: Each participants underwent three IPL sessions with a two-week interval between each session (pre-surgery, post-surgery week-one, and post-surgery week-three). For controls, placebo was administered following the same protocol. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: visual outcomes and refraction, slit-lamp examination, corneal topography, visual analogue scale questionnaire and Oculus Keratograph 5 M including tear meniscus height, non-invasive tear break- up time, ocular redness, infrared meibography and Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI) questionnaire. RESULTS: 61 randomized eyes were included. No significant differences were observed in terms of uncorrected and corrected distance visual acuity (UDVA, CDVA), refractive error or corneal aberrations. A statistically significant improvement in OSDI score (change -8.47, p = 0.043), tear meniscus (change 0.05 mm, p = 0.004) and Meibography (change -0.42, p = 0.012) was observed at the third postoperative month in the study group. Additionally, at the sixth postoperative month, there were statistically significant improvements in tear meniscus (change 0.06 mm, p = 0.018), tear break-up-time (change 1.68 s, p = 0.039) and Meibography (change -0.37, p = 0.030). CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest that perioperative IPL therapy applied to laser corneal refractive surgery improves objective and subjective ocular surface parameters over non-IPL-treated control patients and early postoperative dry eye symptoms.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePerioperativeRefractive surgeryRandomized controlled trialOphthalmologyPlaceboSurgeryCorneaPathologyAlternative medicineOcular Surface and Contact LensOcular Infections and TreatmentsIntraocular Surgery and Lenses