Elsevier

Ophthalmology

Volume 104, Issue 9, September 1997, Pages 1409-1413
Ophthalmology

Unilateral Keratoconus: Incidence and Quantitative Topographic Analysis+,++

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0161-6420(97)30123-7Get rights and content

Objective: This study was designed to determine the incidence of unilaterality in a population of patients with clinical keratoconus and to compare quantitative descriptors of topography between affected corneas from patients with unilateral keratoconus and corneas of patients with bilateral disease.

Design: Retrospective clinical study with new evaluation of some patients.

Participants: One hundred sixty-four patients from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and Wills Eye Hospital who were diagnosed to have moderateto-advanced keratoconus on the basis of characteristic topographic patterns associated with corneal thinning.

Intervention: Corneal topography was evaluated in both eyes of each patient.

Main Outcome Measures: Quantitative descriptors of corneal topography were compared between 5 affected corneas of patients with unilateral keratoconus (combined cases from University of Texas Southwestern, LSU Eye Center, and Wills Eye Hospital) and 15 corneas of patients with moderate-to-advanced bilateral keratoconus (1 cornea from each patient). Indices selected for statistical analysis were the Keratoconus Predication Index (KPI), Surface Asymmetry Index (SAI), and Surface Regularity Index (SRI).

Results: Three (1.83%) of 164 patients with moderate-to-advanced keratoconus had no topographic evidence of keratoconus in the opposite eye. There were no statistically significant differences in KPI, SRI, or SAI values between the affected corneas of patients with unilateral and bilateral keratoconus. Over a period of 4 years of observation, signs of keratoconus in the previously normal eye developed in a patient with unilateral keratoconus.

Conclusions: The authors found no differences in the quantitative descriptors of corneal topography between corneas with keratoconus from unilateral and bilateral cases. The authors' results suggest that the incidence of “unilateral” keratoconus is very low. Patients initially diagnosed with unilateral keratoconus, if observed for a sufficient period, commonly had signs of keratoconus develop in the opposite eye. The possibility that all cases of unilateral keratoconus may eventually become bilateral cannot be excluded. Therefore, refractive surgical procedures should not be performed on apparently normal corneas when keratoconus is detected in the opposite eye.

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Presented at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology Annual Meeting, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, March 15, 1995.

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Supported in part by grants EY10056 and EY03311 from the National Eye Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, and the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio.

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Dr. Klyce is a paid consultant to Computed Anatomy, New York, New York. None of the other authors have any commercial or proprietary interest in the instruments used in this study.

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