Erschienen in:
12.05.2018 | Case Report
Late-onset traumatic dislocation of laser in situ keratomileusis corneal flaps: a case series with many clinical lessons
verfasst von:
Darren Shu Jeng Ting, Jean-Pierre Danjoux
Erschienen in:
International Ophthalmology
|
Ausgabe 6/2019
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Abstract
Purpose
To report three cases of late-onset (7–14 years postoperative) traumatic dislocation of laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) flaps with epithelial ingrowth that all had delayed surgical intervention.
Methods
A retrospective, interventional case series of three patients who underwent flap repositioning and mechanical debridement of epithelial ingrowth, all after an initial delayed diagnosis/treatment of dislocated LASIK flap.
Results
Visual improvement was noted in all three cases following LASIK flap repositioning and debridement of epithelial ingrowth; patient 1 improved from 20/800 corrected-distance-visual-acuity (CDVA) to 20/20 uncorrected-distance-visual-acuity (UDVA) postoperative (14 years post-LASIK, 5-week interval between injury and surgery), patient 2 improved from 20/50 CDVA to 20/20 CDVA (10 years post-LASIK, 4-month interval between injury and surgery) and patient 3 improved from 20/80 CDVA to 20/60 CDVA (7 years post-LASIK, 14-month interval between injury and surgery). Flap dislocation was not suspected or diagnosed in two patients during the first ophthalmic visit. Postoperative visual outcome was not influenced by the presenting vision but might be negatively affected by the delay in surgical intervention, the presence of preoperative central epithelial ingrowth and postoperative striae.
Conclusions
This case series reported one of the longest documented intervals between LASIK and traumatic dislocation of LASIK flap with secondary epithelial ingrowth. Delayed diagnosis and management of flap dislocation after corneal trauma may potentially increase the risk of epithelial ingrowth, recalcitrant flap striae and visual impairment. The presence of late-onset epithelial ingrowth in patients with previous LASIK mandates careful examination for occult flap displacement.