Astigmatism occurs when the cornea or lens has different curvatures across meridians, producing blurred or distorted vision at all distances. It is present in varying degrees in a large proportion of patients presenting for refractive consultation, and the question of how to correct it most safely and durably is one that runs through all three refractive pathways.
Laser eye surgery treats corneal astigmatism by applying a customised ablation pattern that reshapes the cornea differently along each meridian. For patients with normal corneal structure and moderate astigmatism, this approach produces excellent and stable outcomes.¹
Toric ICL surgery corrects astigmatism by implanting a lens with different optical powers along specific axes, neutralising the astigmatic error without altering the cornea. This is the preferred approach at Blue Fin Vision® for patients with higher astigmatism combined with a prescription that makes laser less appropriate, or where corneal structure does not support safe laser treatment.²
Toric intraocular lenses used in lens replacement surgery address astigmatism by the same optical principle, applied within the lens capsule. This is the preferred route for astigmatic patients over 45 where the natural lens is already contributing to visual symptoms.³
The important clinical point is that astigmatism does not determine the procedure – all three pathways can address it. The procedure is determined by the broader anatomical and age-related assessment. Astigmatism correction is then incorporated within whichever pathway is safest for that patient.
References
- Reinstein DZ, Archer TJ, Gobbe M. Small incision lenticule extraction (SMILE) history, fundamentals of a new refractive surgery technique and clinical outcomes. Eye Vis (Lond). 2014;1:3.
- Packer M. Effectiveness and safety of the implantable collamer lens for high myopia and hyperopia. Clin Ophthalmol. 2016;10:1059–1077.
- Cochener B, Boutillier G, Lamard M, Guichaoua C. A comparative evaluation of a new generation of diffractive trifocal and extended depth of focus intraocular lenses. J Refract Surg. 2018;34(8):507–514.
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