PURPOSE To evaluate the speed of visual recovery in 16 consecutive patients with corneal endothelial dysfunction who received Descemetstripping automated endothelial keratoplasty (DSAEK). METHODS This is a retrospective study of… Click to show full abstract
PURPOSE To evaluate the speed of visual recovery in 16 consecutive patients with corneal endothelial dysfunction who received Descemetstripping automated endothelial keratoplasty (DSAEK). METHODS This is a retrospective study of a novel method for smallincision endothelial transplantation (DSAEK). Endothelial replacement was accomplished with Descemet stripping of the recipient and insertion of a posterior donor tissue that had been prepared with a microkeratome. Best spectacle-corrected visual acuity (BSCVA) by manifest refraction, endothelial counts, and dislocation rates were measured up to 12 months after DSAEK. RESULTS Sixteen consecutive patients underwent uncomplicated DSAEK. Three patients had known optic nerve or macular disease precluding vision better than 20/200. Of the remaining 14 patients, 11 had BSCVA of 20/40 by postoperative week 12 (7 by week 6). The remaining 2 were 20/50 by weeks 6 and 12. All 14 patients were 20/40 or better at 1 year. One patient had a primary graft failure, and surgery was repeated with 20/40 BSCVA at 1 year. The dislocation rate was 25%. The average cell count between 7 and 10 months was 1714. The average pachymetry was 682. CONCLUSION DSAEK surgery allows rapid, excellent BSCVAvisual recovery. The rate of visual recovery is more rapid than usually found with penetrating keratoplasty.
               
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