A prospective, randomised study was performed on 52 patients undergoing routine limbal extracapsular cataract surgery to compare the effect of 10/0 nylon and 9/0 elastic polypropylene sutures on post-operative astigmatism. Both the magnitude and the axis of the astigmatism were measured by keratometry and refraction pre-operatively and at regular intervals for 3 months post-operatively. Both groups showed an increase in the magnitude of astigmatism immediately post-operatively. The polypropylene group showed a more rapid decrease in astigmatism over the first 7 days and subsequent stabilisation, although the only significant (p<0.05) difference in astigmatism between the two groups was at week post-operatively. Both groups showed ‘with-the-rule’ astigmatism immediately post-operatively, although more of the polypropylene group developed ‘against-the-rule’ astigmatism by the end of the study. Despite an early reduction in post-operative astigmatism in the polypropylene group, early spectacle prescribing would not be recommended because of the shift in the axis of astigmatism. In addition, the polypropylene group had a 4 times greater incidence of iris prolapse compared with the nylon group. © 1994 Royal College of Ophthalmologists.
CITATION STYLE
O’ Driscoll, A. M., Goble, R. R., Hallack, G. N., & Andrew, N. C. (1994). A prospective, controlled study of a 9/0 elastic polypropylene suture for cataract surgery: Refractive results and complications. Eye (Basingstoke), 8(5), 538–542. https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.1994.133
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