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    Br J Ophthalmol. 2004 Nov;88(11):1387-90.

    Optotype acuity and re-operation rate after unilateral cataract surgery during the first 6 months of life with or without IOL implantation.

    Lambert SR, Lynn M, Drews-Botsch C, DuBois L, Plager DA, Medow NB, Wilson ME, Buckley EG.

    Emory University School of Public Health, Atlanta, GA, USA. slamber@emory.edu

    AIMS: To compare optotype acuities and re-operation rates in children corrected with a contact lens (CL) compared with an intraocular lens (IOL) following unilateral cataract extraction during infancy in a non-randomised, retrospective case series. METHODS: 25 infants with a unilateral congenital cataract underwent cataract surgery with (IOL group, n = 12) or without (CL group, n = 13) IOL implantation when <7 months of age. Optotype acuities were assessed in 19 of these children at a mean age of 4.3 years (range 3.3-5.5 years). The number of re-operations were assessed in 21 children. RESULTS: The visual acuity results were similar in the two treatment groups (p = 0.99); however, two of the four (50%) children in the IOL group compared with two of the seven (28%) children in the CL group undergoing surgery during the first 6 weeks of life had 20/40 or better visual acuity. The children in the IOL group had more re-operations than the children in the CL group (mean 1.1 v 0.36). Most of the re-operations in the IOL group were membranectomies performed during the first year of life (median 8.0 months) whereas all of the re-operations in the CL group were the implantation of a secondary IOL later in childhood (mean 2.2 years). CONCLUSION: Optotype acuities were similar for the children corrected with a CL compared with IOL, while the children in the IOL group underwent more re-operations .

    PMID: 15489478 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 1772405

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