Refractive surgery can include various methods of surgical remodeling of the
cornea (
keratomileusis), lens implantation or lens replacement. The most common methods today use
excimer lasers to reshape the curvature of the cornea.
Flap procedures Excimer laser ablation is done under a partial-thickness lamellar corneal flap. •
Automated lamellar keratoplasty (ALK): The surgeon uses an instrument called a
microkeratome to cut a thin flap of the corneal tissue. The flap is lifted like a hinged door, targeted tissue is removed from the
corneal stroma, again with the microkeratome, and then the flap is replaced. •
Laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK): The surgeon uses either a microkeratome or a
femtosecond laser to cut a flap of the corneal tissue (usually with a thickness of 100–180 micrometres). The flap is lifted like a hinged door, but in contrast to ALK, the targeted tissue is removed from the corneal stroma with an excimer laser. The flap is subsequently replaced. When the flap is created using an IntraLase brand femtosecond laser, the method is called IntraLASIK; other femtosecond lasers such as the Ziemer create a flap similarly. Femtosecond lasers have numerous advantages over mechanical microkeratome based procedure. Microkeratome related flap complications like incomplete flaps, buttonholes or epithelial erosion are largely eliminated utilising the femtosecond laser procedure. Absence of microscopic metal fragments from the blade will reduce the risk of lamellar keratitis also. • Keratorefractive
Lenticule Extraction (KLEx): The term "Keratorefractive Lenticule Extraction" encompasses all proprietary terms for corneal lenticule extraction surgeries fro refractive error correction. • KLEx "FLEx" (Femtosecond Lenticule Extraction): A femtosecond laser cuts a disc-shaped piece of corneal tissue called a "lenticule" within the corneal stroma. Subsequently, a LASIK-like flap is cut which can be lifted to access the lenticule. This is removed through manual dissection using a blunt spatula and forceps. • KLEx "SMILE" (
Small Incision Lenticule Extraction): A newer technique without a flap, a femtosecond laser cuts a lenticule within the corneal stroma. The same laser is used to cut a small incision along the periphery of the lenticule about 1/5th the size of a standard LASIK flap incision. The surgeon then uses a specially designed instrument to separate and remove the lenticule through the incision, leaving the anterior lamellae of the cornea intact. No excimer laser is used in the "ReLEx-procedures". "SMILE" often refers to the first commercially available KLEX procedure however there remain many derivatives including SMILE Pro, SILK, CLEAR and SmartSIGHT. These terms reflect the principal companies and differ by the laser used for the procedure. Although each laser is a femtosecond laser, there remain minor differences between laser properties.
Surface procedures The excimer laser is used to ablate the most anterior portion of the
corneal stroma. These procedures do not require a partial thickness cut into the stroma. Surface ablation methods differ only in the way the epithelial layer is handled. •
Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) is an outpatient procedure generally performed with local
anesthetic eye drops (as with LASIK/LASEK). It is a type of refractive surgery which reshapes the cornea by removing microscopic amounts of tissue from the corneal stroma, using a computer-controlled beam of light (
excimer laser). The difference from LASIK is that the top layer of the epithelium is removed (and a bandage contact lens is used), so no flap is created. Recovery time is longer with PRK than with LASIK, though the outcome (after 3 months) is about the same (very good). More recently, customized ablation has been performed with LASIK, LASEK, and PRK. •
Transepithelial photorefractive keratectomy (TransPRK) is a laser-assisted eye surgery to correct refraction errors of human eye corneas. It uses an excimer laser to ablate the outer layer of the cornea, the epithelium, as well as its connective tissue, the stroma, to correct the eye's optical power. •
Laser Assisted Sub-Epithelium Keratomileusis (LASEK) is also a procedure that changes the shape of the cornea using an
excimer laser to ablate the tissue from the corneal stroma, under the corneal epithelium, which is kept mostly intact to act as a natural
bandage. The surgeon uses an alcohol solution to loosen then lift a thin layer of the epithelium (usually with a thickness of 50 micrometres) with a
trephine blade. During the weeks following LASEK, the epithelium heals, leaving no permanent flap in the cornea. This healing process can involve discomfort comparable to that with PRK. •
EPI-LASIK is a new technique similar to LASEK that uses an
epi-keratome (rather than a trephine blade and alcohol), to remove the top layer of the epithelium (usually with thickness of 50 micrometres), which is subsequently replaced. For some people it can provide better results than regular LASEK in that it avoids the possibility of negative effects from the alcohol, and recovery may involve less discomfort. •
Customized Transepithelial No-touch (C-TEN) is an innovative strategy for corneal surgery that avoids any corneal manipulation via a complete laser-assisted trans-epithelial approach. Since C-TEN is planned on the morphology of each individual eye, it can treat a large variety of corneal pathologies from refractive to therapeutic. C-TEN is sometimes referred to as Advanced Surface Ablation (ASA)
Corneal incision procedures •
Radial keratotomy (RK), developed by Russian ophthalmologist
Svyatoslav Fyodorov in 1974, uses spoke-shaped incisions, always made with a diamond knife, to alter the shape of the cornea and reduce
myopia or
astigmatism; this technique is, in medium to high diopters, usually replaced by other refractive methods. • Arcuate keratotomy (AK), also known as Astigmatic keratotomy, uses curvilinear incisions at the periphery of the cornea to correct high levels of non-pathological astigmatism, up to 13 diopters. AK is often used for the correction of high post-keratoplasty astigmatism or post-cataract surgery astigmatism. •
Limbal relaxing incisions (LRI) are incisions near the outer edge of the iris, used to correct minor astigmatism (typically less than 2 diopters). This is often performed in conjunction with the implantation of
intraocular lenses.
Refractive lens exchange Clear lens extraction or refractive lens exchange is effectively the same procedure as
cataract surgery used to replace a natural lens with high refractive error when other methods are not effective. In addition to the common complications of cataract surgery, clear lens extraction may also cause premature posterior
vitreous detachment and
retinal detachment. A related procedure is the implantation of
phakic intraocular lenses in series with the natural lens to correct vision in cases of high refractive errors. Using mid-IR and UV lasers for the treatment of presbyopia by scleral tissue ablation was first proposed and patented by J.T. Lin, Ph.D. in US patents #6,258,082 (in 2001) and #6,824,540 (in 2004). ==Expectations==