Keratoconus and Possible Treatments

Figure 1. Corneal map of an eye with early keratoconus.
TREATMENT OPTIONS
The prognosis for keratoconus, if treated, is excellent. There are two main goals for treatment. The first goal is to stop the progression of the disease with CXL. The second goal is to improve vision with technologies that include glasses and soft contact lenses in mild cases, and scleral contact lenses in patients who have experienced a reduction in BCVA. Other treatments that have the potential to improve vision include Intacs (AJL Ophthalmic) as well as topography-guided PRK. Most patients who have keratoconus are candidates for CXL; the procedure can stabilize the condition and prevent progression. The CXL procedure can improve the corneal shape, and can also improve both uncorrected VA and BCVA. We therefore perform CXL in patients with all levels of keratoconus, although patients with mild corneal changes and crisp corrected vision can be observed. Scleral contact lenses are also an option for patients with keratoconus, especially when there is a loss of BCVA with spectacles. This lens technology vaults over the cornea, and can dramatically improve a patient’s vision for the duration of time that the device is worn. In some cases, either CXL or scleral lenses are sufficient independent of each other. In other cases, the two go hand in hand. For instance, if a patient who has keratoconus is seeing well with spectacles, one might opt to perform CXL and have the patient continue wearing glasses. In other instances where patients have inadequate vision with spectacles, the choice might be to perform CXL and then fit the patient for scleral lenses to improve vision further. If keratoconus has progressed to the point where a patient cannot see well enough to function independently, he or she may benefit from scleral lenses fitting before undergoing CXL. The risk of this scenario is that the refractive error and vision may change rapidly, making the recently prescribed scleral lenses off-target. However, in our experience, the rate of change in vision after CXL is slow, and the same scleral lenses will typically work well for patients even a year after CXL.SCIENCE FOR THE WIN!
Innovations such as CXL allow eye care providers to help patients whose condition was previously responsive to therapy, or whose condition was never addressed. It is another example of how eye care is one of the most exciting disciplines in medicine thanks to the constant innovation in the field.Ready to Claim Your Credits?
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