Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)

Radial keratotomy (RK) was widely used at the end of the last century for refractive purposes. However, ophthalmologists are increasingly faced with negative long-term consequences after RK now. A relatively rare complication after RK is subepithelial fibrosis (according to some data, it occurs in 2...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. V. Trufanov, L. Yu. Tekeeva, M. A. Makarova, N. P. Shahbazyan
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Ophthalmology Publishing Group 2019-06-01
Series:Oftalʹmologiâ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ophthalmojournal.com/opht/article/view/966
id doaj-5c5d9f44f0d1465fb256de1629b95979
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5c5d9f44f0d1465fb256de1629b959792021-07-29T08:55:28ZrusOphthalmology Publishing GroupOftalʹmologiâ 1816-50952019-06-0116226527010.18008/1816-5095-2019-2-265-270549Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)S. V. Trufanov0L. Yu. Tekeeva1M. A. Makarova2N. P. Shahbazyan3Research Institute of Eye DiseasesResearch Institute of Eye DiseasesResearch Institute of Eye DiseasesResearch Institute of Eye DiseasesRadial keratotomy (RK) was widely used at the end of the last century for refractive purposes. However, ophthalmologists are increasingly faced with negative long-term consequences after RK now. A relatively rare complication after RK is subepithelial fibrosis (according to some data, it occurs in 2.7 % of cases), which may be the result of abnormal activation or proliferation of stromal keratocytes (stromal fibroblasts) after surgical or accidental injury of the Bowman membrane. Phototherapeutic keratectomy and manual mechanical removal by the “scraper” are used for the removal of fibrous tissue, as well as a combination of these methods with mitomycin. Since laser energy can provoke a recurrence of fibrosis in the future due to the activation of stromal keratocytes and using “scraper” is not always possible to remove fibrotic tissue and the use of mitomycin is associated with a number of complications, the question of finding new methods for its removal with minimal risk of complications arises. The method of diamond burr polishing of the cornea, which developed by us for treating the syndrome of recurrent cornea erosion, was, in our opinion, the most optimal for this purpose. The method of diamond burr polishing of the cornea in this clinical case made it possible to remove the epithelial fibrosis zone without damaging the Bowman’s layer, thereby avoiding the recurrence of fibrosis in the postoperative period (the follow-up period was 2 years). The depth of the location pathological tissue location was assessed using the OCT of the cornea. The absence of recurrence is also confirmed biomicroscopically and with the OCT of the cornea. So, the method of diamond burr polishing of the Bowman’s layer can be a method of choice for the treatment of subepithelial fibrosis for patients after keratorefractive operations, being highly effective, accessible, easy to perform.https://www.ophthalmojournal.com/opht/article/view/966radial keratotomysubepithelial fibrosisdiamond burr polishing of bowman’s layerdiamond burr
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. V. Trufanov
L. Yu. Tekeeva
M. A. Makarova
N. P. Shahbazyan
spellingShingle S. V. Trufanov
L. Yu. Tekeeva
M. A. Makarova
N. P. Shahbazyan
Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)
Oftalʹmologiâ
radial keratotomy
subepithelial fibrosis
diamond burr polishing of bowman’s layer
diamond burr
author_facet S. V. Trufanov
L. Yu. Tekeeva
M. A. Makarova
N. P. Shahbazyan
author_sort S. V. Trufanov
title Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)
title_short Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)
title_full Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)
title_fullStr Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)
title_full_unstemmed Diamond Burr Polishing of Bowman’s Layer in the Treatment of Subepithelial Fibrosis after Radial Keratotomy (Clinical Case)
title_sort diamond burr polishing of bowman’s layer in the treatment of subepithelial fibrosis after radial keratotomy (clinical case)
publisher Ophthalmology Publishing Group
series Oftalʹmologiâ
issn 1816-5095
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Radial keratotomy (RK) was widely used at the end of the last century for refractive purposes. However, ophthalmologists are increasingly faced with negative long-term consequences after RK now. A relatively rare complication after RK is subepithelial fibrosis (according to some data, it occurs in 2.7 % of cases), which may be the result of abnormal activation or proliferation of stromal keratocytes (stromal fibroblasts) after surgical or accidental injury of the Bowman membrane. Phototherapeutic keratectomy and manual mechanical removal by the “scraper” are used for the removal of fibrous tissue, as well as a combination of these methods with mitomycin. Since laser energy can provoke a recurrence of fibrosis in the future due to the activation of stromal keratocytes and using “scraper” is not always possible to remove fibrotic tissue and the use of mitomycin is associated with a number of complications, the question of finding new methods for its removal with minimal risk of complications arises. The method of diamond burr polishing of the cornea, which developed by us for treating the syndrome of recurrent cornea erosion, was, in our opinion, the most optimal for this purpose. The method of diamond burr polishing of the cornea in this clinical case made it possible to remove the epithelial fibrosis zone without damaging the Bowman’s layer, thereby avoiding the recurrence of fibrosis in the postoperative period (the follow-up period was 2 years). The depth of the location pathological tissue location was assessed using the OCT of the cornea. The absence of recurrence is also confirmed biomicroscopically and with the OCT of the cornea. So, the method of diamond burr polishing of the Bowman’s layer can be a method of choice for the treatment of subepithelial fibrosis for patients after keratorefractive operations, being highly effective, accessible, easy to perform.
topic radial keratotomy
subepithelial fibrosis
diamond burr polishing of bowman’s layer
diamond burr
url https://www.ophthalmojournal.com/opht/article/view/966
work_keys_str_mv AT svtrufanov diamondburrpolishingofbowmanslayerinthetreatmentofsubepithelialfibrosisafterradialkeratotomyclinicalcase
AT lyutekeeva diamondburrpolishingofbowmanslayerinthetreatmentofsubepithelialfibrosisafterradialkeratotomyclinicalcase
AT mamakarova diamondburrpolishingofbowmanslayerinthetreatmentofsubepithelialfibrosisafterradialkeratotomyclinicalcase
AT npshahbazyan diamondburrpolishingofbowmanslayerinthetreatmentofsubepithelialfibrosisafterradialkeratotomyclinicalcase
_version_ 1721250933670674432