Management of Dry Eye Disease Pre- and Post-Cataract Surgery: A Personalized Approach
Samantha Spritz, Raul E. Ruiz-Lozano, Zahra Bibak-Bejandi, Nicholas W. Setter, Alejandro Rodriguez-Garcia, Zeenal Dabre, Ali Khodor, Robert Schwartz, Sandeep Jain, Ali R. Djalilian

TL;DR
This paper discusses managing dry eye disease before and after cataract surgery to improve outcomes and reduce complications.
Contribution
The paper emphasizes personalized perioperative management of dry eye disease to enhance surgical outcomes.
Findings
Pre-operative diagnosis and treatment of dry eye disease can improve surgical refractive outcomes.
Failure to address dry eye risk factors can lead to poor surgical outcomes and worsened symptoms.
Recent diagnostic advancements help understand post-surgery dry eye disease pathophysiology.
Abstract
Dry eye disease (DED) is a common condition that can be associated with cataract surgery, requiring pre- and postoperative considerations. Pre-existent DED and disruption of the tear film homeostasis due to incisional corneal nerve damage, intra-operative ocular surface drying, microscope phototoxicity, or the toxic effects of preservatives and active ingredients of postoperative drops or a combination thereof, represents a potential mechanism for worsening or developing DED after cataract surgery. Recent diagnostic advancements have enabled us better to understand the pathophysiology of DED after cataract surgery. For patients with pre-existing DED before cataract surgery, early intervention can improve surgical outcomes. In contrast, failure to recognize DED risk factors or subtle signs can result in inaccurate refractive measurements, poor surgical outcomes, including serious…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Surface and Contact Lens · Ocular Infections and Treatments · Corneal Surgery and Treatments
