The Effect of Dry Eye Disease Treatment Prior to Cataract Surgery on Refractive Error Reduction
Katarzyna Biela, Mateusz Winiarczyk, Beata Gumieniak-Goch, Jerzy Mackiewicz

TL;DR
Treating dry eye disease before cataract surgery helps reduce refractive errors after the procedure.
Contribution
This study shows that preoperative dry eye treatment improves refractive predictability in cataract surgery.
Findings
Treating dry eye disease before surgery reduced refractive error in patients with and without DED.
The mean absolute error decreased significantly after treatment in both DED and non-DED groups.
Corneal astigmatism was the most variable parameter in patients with dry eye disease.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Dry-eye disease (DED) is a disorder of the eye surface associated, among other things, with tear film instability. It can lead to abnormal biometry results, especially with respect to keratometry. DED is more common in the elderly population. Its prevalence is often underestimated. Failure to provide adequate treatment prior to biometry may result in refractive errors after cataract surgery. The purpose of this study was to quantify the impact of DED on refractive predictability in cataract surgery and assess whether short, preoperative ocular-surface optimization reduces the mean absolute error (MAE) of postoperative refraction, regardless of DED. Methods: Seventy patients undergoing cataract surgery were divided into three groups: A—individuals with DED who were receiving treatment; B—individuals without DED who were receiving treatment; and C—a control group.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Surface and Contact Lens · Ophthalmology and Visual Impairment Studies · Corneal surgery and disorders
