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What Is the Risk of Ectasia After Enhancement?

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Corneal ectasia is a progressive thinning and bulging disorder that can occur after excessive stromal weakening.

The risk is low but must be considered in both primary treatment and enhancement ¹.

Key safety principles include:

  • Adequate residual stromal bed (≥300 microns) ¹
  • Normal pre-operative topography ²
  • Absence of forme fruste keratoconus
  • Conservative tissue removal ³

Enhancement should never compromise biomechanical stability.

Large retrospective series show that careful screening dramatically reduces ectasia risk ². Most cases historically occurred in inadequately screened corneas ¹ ².

Enhancement is safe when tissue margins are respected.

Long-term planning at the first surgery preserves enhancement options later ³.

Safety margins are not optional. They are mandatory.

References

  1. Randleman JB, Woodward M, Lynn MJ, Stulting RD. Risk assessment for ectasia after LASIK. Ophthalmology. 2008;115(1):37-50.
  2. Binder PS. Analysis of ectasia after LASIK. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2007;33(9):1530-1538.
  3. Santhiago MR, Smadja D, Gomes BF, et al. Association between residual stromal bed and ectasia risk. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2014;40(6):918-928.

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