In Fuchs’ endothelial dystrophy, corneal reserve is reduced. Even modest surgical stress can trigger corneal decompensation.
For these patients, every second inside the eye matters. High-efficiency phaco emphasises dispersive viscoelastics, low ultrasound energy, and minimal intraocular duration.
Posterior capsule rupture in a Fuchs’ eye is particularly dangerous and may precipitate irreversible corneal failure and graft surgery. Pre-operative endothelial cell counts and careful planning guide whether staged or combined procedures are safer.
Efficiency here is a protective strategy, not a marketing claim.
What this means for you
- Ask about endothelial assessment and protective techniques
- Experience matters greatly in compromised corneas
Question to ask
- “What is my endothelial cell count, and how will you protect my cornea?”
References
- Patel SV. Cataract surgery in patients with Fuchs’ endothelial dystrophy. Current Opinion in Ophthalmology. 2010;21(1):61–66.
- Seitzman GD, Gottsch JD, Stark WJ. Cataract surgery in patients with Fuchs’ corneal dystrophy: expanding recommendations for cataract surgery without simultaneous keratoplasty. Ophthalmology. 2005;112(3):441–446.