Prevalence of Keratoconus in a Refractive Surgery Population
- PMID: 30271629
- PMCID: PMC6146781
- DOI: 10.1155/2018/5983530
Prevalence of Keratoconus in a Refractive Surgery Population
Abstract
Objective: This study examined the prevalence of keratoconus among patients who were interested in undergoing refractive surgery. Corneal tomography measurements were used to help detect keratoconus.
Methods: Adult subjects who presented to the private hospital Cataract and Refractive Surgery Unit (Abha, Saudi Arabia) for refractive surgery evaluation were considered for inclusion in this cross-sectional, retrospective study. All subjects were from the Aseer province, a southern, high-altitude region in Saudi Arabia, and presented between January and December 2017. The incidence of keratoconus and other refractive surgery contraindications were examined.
Results: A total of 2931 patients were considered for inclusion in analyses. Of these, 2280 patients (77.8%) were not candidates for refractive surgery. These 2280 patients had a mean age of 24.1 ± 6.6 years and 1231 patients (54.0%) were male. Of the subjects who did not undergo refractive surgery, 548 (24%) had keratoconus, 400 (17.5%) were keratoconus suspects, 344 (15.1%) had thin corneas, 321 (14.1%) had high myopia, and 52 (2.3%) had a high astigmatism. An additional 479 subjects (21%) were candidates for refractive surgery, but chose not to undergo a procedure.
Conclusion: The incidence of keratoconus in Saudi Arabian refractive surgery prospects was 18.7%. Keratoconus was the most common reason for not performing refractive surgery and accounted for 24.0% of cases in which surgery was not performed.
References
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- Raiskup F., Theuring A., Pillunat L. E., Spoerl E. Corneal collagen cross-linking with riboflavin and ultraviolet—a light in progressive keratoconus: ten-year results. Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery. 2015;41:41–46. - PubMed
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