Many patients are surprised to find they still need glasses after cataract surgery, particularly if they expected the procedure to deliver complete spectacle independence. This outcome is common and does not indicate that surgery was unsuccessful.
Intraocular lens power is calculated before the operation using precise measurements of the eye, including axial length and corneal curvature. ² However, the calculation is predictive rather than exact. Small variations in how the lens settles within the eye, or how the eye heals individually, can leave a mild residual prescription, including low myopia, hyperopia or astigmatism. ¹ Even a quarter of a dioptre can be perceptible to patients with high visual expectations. ¹
In addition, most standard intraocular lenses are optimised for one focal distance. Patients who receive a monofocal lens set for distance vision will typically still require reading glasses. This is a planned outcome, not a complication.
Where spectacle independence was the agreed goal and residual refractive error is measurable, enhancement options including laser vision correction or a supplementary piggyback lens may be considered once refractive stability is confirmed. ³ A structured postoperative assessment identifies whether the residual prescription is correctable and whether the eye is ready for further intervention.
References
1. Lundström M, Dickman M, Henry Y, Manning S, Rosen P. Risk factors for refractive error after cataract surgery: analysis of 282,811 cataract extractions reported to the European Registry of Quality Outcomes for Cataract and Refractive Surgery. Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery. 2018;44(4):447–452.
2. Aristodemou P, Knox Cartwright NE, Sparrow JM, Johnston RL. Formula choice: Hoffer Q, Holladay 1, or SRK/T and refractive outcomes in 8108 eyes after cataract surgery with biometry by partial coherence interferometry. Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery. 2011;37(1):63–71.
3. Dick HB, Schultz T, Gerste RD. Management of residual refractive error after cataract surgery. Ophthalmology. 2016;123(4):728–735.
Related Topics:
- Assessing Suboptimal Vision After Cataract Surgery: Why It Happens, and When We Enhance
- Why Do I Still Need Glasses After Cataract Surgery?
- Laser Enhancement After Cataract Surgery: When We Recommend It
- Piggyback Lens vs Laser: Fixing Small Errors After Cataract Surgery
- Dry Eye After Cataract Surgery: Why Vision Seems Worse Than It Is
- Blinking Clears My Vision After Cataract Surgery: Is It Dry Eye?
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- Halos and Glare After Cataract Surgery: Neuroadaptation Explained
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- Blur After Cataract Surgery: Our Step-by-Step Diagnostic Pathway Before Any Enhancement