CLINICAL TRIAL
CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIAL
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Retinal detachment in phakic eyes with anterior chamber intraocular lenses to correct severe myopia.

PURPOSE: To analyze the incidence and characteristics of retinal detachment in patients with severe myopia corrected by implantation of phakic anterior chamber intraocular lenses.

METHODS: We studied retinal detachments in 166 consecutive eyes (98 patients) that underwent implantation of angle-supported phakic anterior chamber intraocular lenses (models ZB5M and ZB5MF; Domilens; Lyon, France) for the correction of severe myopia (follow-up +/- SD, 45.26 +/- 14.65 months; range, 20 to 84 months).

RESULTS: Retinal detachment occurred in eight eyes (4.8%); four eyes belonged to men and four to women. The time between implanting surgery and retinal detachment was 17.43 +/- 16.4 months (range, 1 to 44 months). In all cases, retinal detachment was spontaneous. In seven eyes, the retina was reattached successfully during the first retinal detachment surgery. Mean best-corrected visual acuity after phakic anterior chamber intraocular lens implantation and before retinal detachment development was 20/50 (range, 20/100 to 20/25). After retinal detachment repair, best-corrected visual acuity was 20/73 (range, 20/2000 to 20/33). In these seven eyes, differences between best-corrected visual acuity before and after reattachment were not statistically significant (P = .898, paired Student t test). In one eye, a proliferative vitreoretinopathy was observed, which required additional treatment by vitrectomy and explantation of the phakic anterior chamber intraocular lens. A refractive change was observed after retinal detachment repair, from -1.1 +/- 0.7 diopters (range, 0.00 to -2.50 diopters) before retinal detachment and -2.8 +/- 1.1 diopters (range, -1.00 to -4.50 diopters) after retinal detachment surgery (P = .03, paired Student t test).

CONCLUSIONS: The implantation of a phakic anterior chamber intraocular lens as a correcting procedure for severe myopia was followed by a 4.8% incidence of retinal detachment. Conventional scleral surgery was successful in most cases, without causing significant changes in the final best-corrected visual acuity. A significant increase in the myopic spherical equivalent was observed after retinal detachment repair in these patients.

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