Sara Padroni
Ninewells Hospital
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Featured researches published by Sara Padroni.
Clinical Ophthalmology | 2012
Ioannis M. Aslanides; Sara Padroni; Samuel Arba Mosquera; Antonis Ioannides; Achyut Mukherjee
Purpose To evaluate postoperative pain, corneal epithelial healing, development of corneal haze, refractive outcomes, and corneal aberrations in a novel one-step, modified transepithelial photorefractive keratectomy (PRK), termed All-surface laser ablation (ASLA), compared to conventional, alcohol-assisted PRK. Materials and methods Sixty eyes of 30 myopic patients were prospectively recruited to a randomized fellow eye study. Patients underwent conventional alcohol-assisted PRK in one eye (control group) and ASLA-modified transepithelial PRK in the other (30 eyes in each treatment arm). Primary endpoints were postoperative pain and haze scores at 1 day, 3 days, 1 week, and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months. Secondary endpoints included visual acuity at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months, corneal aberrations at 3, 6, and 12 months, and early and late onset haze. Refractive predictability, safety, and efficacy of the two methods were considered. Results The average age of the cohort was 29 years (standard deviation [SD]: 9; range: 18–46), and the average spherical equivalent refractive error was −4.18 diopters (SD: 1.9). At 3 days after surgery, the average pain score was 64% lower in the ASLA group (P < 0.0005). At this point, 96% of ASLA eyes had no epithelial defect, whereas 43% in the alcohol-assisted group did not achieve complete epithelial healing, and required replacement of bandage contact lens. The haze level was consistently lower in the ASLA group at all time points from 1 to 6 months. Conclusion This study shows that the ASLA technique may have a future role in refractive surgery, due to the fact that it offers faster epithelial healing, lower pain scores, and significantly less haze formation.
Contact Lens and Anterior Eye | 2011
Ioannis M Aslanides; Georgia Toliou; Sara Padroni; Samuel Arba Mosquera; Sai Kolli
PURPOSE To compare the refractive and visual outcomes using the Schwind Amaris excimer laser in patients with high astigmatism (>1D) with and without the static cyclotorsion compensation (SCC) algorithm available with this new laser platform. METHODS 70 consecutive eyes with ≥1D astigmatism were randomized to treatment with compensation of static cyclotorsion (SCC group- 35 eyes) or not (control group- 35 eyes). A previously validated optimized aspheric ablation algorithm profile was used in every case. All patients underwent LASIK with a microkeratome cut flap. RESULTS The SCC and control group did not differ preoperatively, in terms of refractive error, magnitude of astigmatism or in terms of cardinal or oblique astigmatism. Following treatment, average deviation from target was SEq +0.16D, SD±0.52 D, range -0.98 D to +1.71 D in the SCC group compared to +0.46 D, SD±0.61 D, range -0.25 D to +2.35 D in the control group, which was statistically significant (p<0.05). Following treatment, average astigmatism was 0.24 D (SD±0.28 D, range -1.01 D to 0.00 D) in the SCC group compared to 0.46 D (SD±0.42 D, range -1.80 D to 0.00 D) in the control group, which was highly statistically significant (p<0.005). There was no statistical difference in the postoperative uncorrected vision when the aspheric algorithm was used although there was a trend to increased number of lines gained in the SCC group. CONCLUSIONS This study shows that static cyclotorsion is accurately compensated for by the Schwind Amaris laser platform. The compensation of static cyclotorsion in patients with moderate astigmatism produces a significant improvement in refractive and astigmatic outcomes than when not compensated.
Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 2003
Andrew J. Quantock; Sara Padroni; Che J. Connon; Gordon Milne; David J. Schanzlin
Purpose: To investigate proteoglycans under minimally damaged epithelium after a lamellar microkeratome incision. Setting: Collaborating university departments. Methods: Anterior lamellar caps were excised from rabbit corneas and then resutured in place. Healing tissue was examined by electron microscopy with proteoglycan staining. Results: In the weeks after surgery, regions of disorganized stromal matrix were populated by sulfated proteoglycan filaments that were much larger (up to 300 nm long) than those in quiescent stroma. Conclusions: Large, sulfated proteoglycans existed in rabbit corneas healing from lamellar incisions. These molecules appear to be a normal feature of corneal wound healing; because of their water‐binding capacity, they might aid tissue restructuring.
Journal of Refractive Surgery | 2012
Ioannis M. Aslanides; Sai Kolli; Sara Padroni; Samuel Arba Mosquera
PURPOSE To evaluate the long-term outcomes of aspheric corneal wavefront ablation profiles for excimer laser retreatment. METHODS Eighteen eyes that had previously undergone LASIK or photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) were retreated with LASIK using the corneal wavefront ablation profile. Custom Ablation Manager (SCHWIND eye-tech-solutions, Kleinostheim, Germany) software and the ESIRIS flying spot excimer laser system (SCHWIND) were used to perform the ablations. Refractive outcomes and wavefront data are reported up to 4 years after retreatment. Pre- and postoperative data were compared with Student t tests and (multivariate) correlation tests. P<.05 was considered statistically significant. A bilinear correlation of various postoperative wavefront aberrations versus planned correction and preoperative aberration was performed. RESULTS Mean manifest refraction spherical equivalent (MRSE) before retreatment was -0.38±1.85 diopters (D) and -0.09±0.22 D at 6 months and -0.10±0.38 D at 4 years postoperatively. The reduction in MRSE was statistically significant at both postoperative time points (P<.005). Postoperative aberrations were statistically lower (spherical aberration P<.05; coma P<.005; root-mean-square higher order aberration P<.0001) at 4 years postoperatively. Distribution of the postoperative uncorrected distance visual acuity (P<.0001) and corrected distance visual acuity (P<.01) were statistically better than preoperative values. CONCLUSIONS Aspheric corneal wavefront customization with the ESIRIS yields visual, optical, and refractive results comparable to those of other wavefront-guided customized techniques for the correction of myopia and myopic astigmatism. The corneal wavefront customized approach shows its strength in cases where abnormal optical systems are expected. Systematic wavefront customized corneal ablation appears safe and efficacious for retreatment cases.
Archive | 2012
Samuel Arba-Mosquera; Sara Padroni; Sai Kolli; Ioannis M. Aslanides
For the correction of astigmatism, many different approaches have been tested, with different degrees of success, through the years1. Patient satisfaction in any refractive surgery, wavefront-guided or not, is primarily dependent on successful treatment of the lower order aberrations (LOA) of the eye (sphere and cylinder). Achieving accurate clinical outcomes and reducing the likelihood of a retreatment procedure are major goals of refractive surgery. LASIK has been successfully used for low to moderate myopic astigmatism, whether LASIK is acceptably efficacious, predictable, and safe in correcting higher myopic astigmatism is less documented, especially with regard to the effects of astigmatic corrections in HOA’s. The correction of astigmatism has been approached using several techniques and ablation profiles. There are several reports showing good results for compound myopic astigmatism using photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) and LASIK, but ablation profiles usually cause a hyperopic shift because of a coupling effect in the flattest corneal meridian. A likely mechanism of this coupling effect is probably due to epithelial remodeling and other effects such as smoothing by the LASIK flap. In cases of large preoperative amounts of astigmatism, deviations from the target refractive outcome are usually attributed to “coupling factors.” Nevertheless, the investigation of the coupling factor remains a rather difficult task, because it seems to be dependent on various factors. Individual excimer laser systems may have different coupling factors, cutting the flap could alter the initial prescription and different preoperative corneal curvatures (K-reading) may have influence on coupling factor.
Journal of Optometry | 2013
Ioannis M. Aslanides; Sara Padroni; Samuel Arba-Mosquera
Gaceta de optometría y óptica oftálmica | 2013
Ioannis M. Aslanides; Sara Padroni; Samuel Arba Mosquera
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011
Georgia Toliou; Sara Padroni; Ioannis M Aslanides
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011
Sara Padroni; Georgia Toliou; Ioannis A. Aslanides
Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 2003
Andrew J. Quantock; Sara Padroni; Che J. Connon; Gordon Milne; David J. Schanzlin