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    J Cataract Refract Surg. 2005 Nov;31(11):2088-92.

    Blue-light filtering intraocular lens in patients with diabetes: contrast sensitivity and chromatic discrimination.

    Source

    Refractive Surgery Unit, Hospital NISA Valencia al Mar, Valencia, Spain. trg1@vodafone.es

    Abstract

    PURPOSE:

    To evaluate potential changes in contrast sensitivity and color discrimination in diabetic patients who had cataract surgery and implantation of the blue-light filtering AcrySof Natural (SN60AT) intraocular lens (IOL) compared with an ultraviolet-only filtering (AcrySof SA60AT) IOL.

    SETTING:

    Refractive Surgery Unit, Hospital NISA Valencia al Mar, Valencia, Spain.

    METHODS:

    Forty-four eyes of 22 diabetic patients were enrolled in a blue-light filtering fellow-eye control study. Patients received yellow-tinted IOLs (AcrySof Natural) in 1 eye and non-yellow-tinted IOLs (AcrySof SA60AT) in the fellow eye. Three months after surgery, monocular contrast sensitivity function was measured with the CSV 1000-E contrast sensitivity chart at distance and color discrimination was tested with the Farnsworth-Munsell 100-hue test.

    RESULTS:

    Eyes implanted with the blue-light filtering IOLs showed better contrast sensitivity values than fellow eyes implanted with non-yellow-tinted IOLs (P<.05). The blue-light filtering IOL did not modify chromatic discrimination compared with the non-yellow-tinted IOL (P = .62). In the blue-yellow axis discrimination study, the eyes implanted with the AcrySof Natural IOL had statistically significant better color vision (P = .008).

    CONCLUSIONS:

    In diabetic patients, the AcrySof Natural IOL provides better contrast sensitivity than the AcrySof SA60AT. The blue-light filter of the AcrySof Natural IOL did not cause chromatic discrimination defects based on total error scores and improved color vision in the blue-yellow chromatic axis in diabetic patients.

    PMID:
    16412920
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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