Corneal topometric indices and proclivity toward corneal ectasia in vernal keratoconjunctivitis
Citation
Yilmaz, Y. C., Ipek, S. C., & Gobeka, H. H. (2023). Corneal topometric indices and proclivity toward corneal ectasia in vernal keratoconjunctivitis. Journal Français d'Ophtalmologie.Abstract
Purpose: To investigate changes in topometric corneal indices and proclivity toward corneal ectasia, as well as keratometric indices and anterior chamber dimensions in palpebral vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC).
Methods: This study included 80 patients with clinically established symptoms of grade 0 or grade 1 palpebral VKC (group 1) and 66 healthy participants (group 2). After a comprehensive ophthalmic examination including best-corrected visual acuity, intraocular pressure measurements and slit-lamp biomicroscopy, pachymetric indices and anterior chamber dimensions were measured using the Pentacam HR rotating Scheimpflug device. Topometric indices, which are particularly useful for determining proclivity toward corneal ectasia, were extracted from a topometric map.
Results: In groups 1 and 2, the mean ages were 13.11±5.22 and 16.45±5.09 years, respectively. The mean age at disease onset in group 1 was 10.09±5.03 years, and the mean disease duration was 36.23±8.43 months. Group 1 had significantly higher mean topometric indices than group 2, particularly the index of surface variance (P=0.001), index of vertical asymmetry (P=0.007), center keratoconus index (P=0.050), and Belin/Ambrosio enhanced ectasia total deviation value (P=0.032). Mean posterior corneal astigmatism differed significantly between groups 1 and 2 (P=0.003).
Conclusions: Significantly higher mean topometric indices in VKC indicate a proclivity for corneal ectasia, which could be attributed to general changes in the corneal ultrastructure caused by persistent itching-induced eye rubbing.