A refractive surprise can be defined as the failure to achieve the intended postoperative refractive target or the presentation of unexpected and, unwanted post-operative refractive error. It can cause anisometropia or dominance switch and is a source of patient dissatisfaction due to unmet expectations.The best way to manage refractive surprise is to prevent it. The 2017 NICE guidelines on the management of cataracts provide advice on prevention of refractive surprise through accurate biometry, A-constant optimisation, intraocular lens (IOL) formula selection and avoiding wrong lens implant errors.Benchmark standards for NHS cataract surgery dictate that 85% of eyes should be within 1 dioptre (D) and 55% within 0.5D of target spherical equivalent refraction following surgery.
Aim(s) of the Research: 1. detection of refractive surprises using autorefractometer, and corneal topography. 2. treatment of the resulting refractive error surprises.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
63
after primary phacoemulsification surgery any resulting refractive error surprises will be corrected with different refractive surgery options
Diagnosis and treatment of the resulting refractive error surprises
Rate of refractive error surprises
Time frame: Baseline
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