Author/Authors :
Zare Mehrjerdi, Mohammad Ali Department of Ophthalmology - Eye Research Center - Farabi Eye Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Mohebbi, Masomeh Department of Ophthalmology - Eye Research Center - Farabi Eye Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Zandian, Mehdi Department of Ophthalmology - Faculty of Medicine - Hamedan University of Medical Sciences, Hamedan
Abstract :
Presbyopia is the primary cause of reduction in the quality of life of people in their 40s, due to dependence
on spectacles. Therefore, presbyopia correction has become an evolving and rapidly progressive field in
refractive surgery. There are two primary options for presbyopia correction: the dynamic approach uses
the residual accommodative capacity of the eye, and the static approach attempts to enhance the depth of
focus of the optical system. The dynamic approach attempts to reverse suspected pathophysiologic changes.
Dynamic approaches such as accommodative intraocular lenses (IOLs), scleral expansion techniques, refilling,
and photodisruption of the crystalline lens have attracted less clinical interest due to inconsistent results
and the complexity of the techniques. We have reviewed the most popular static techniques in presbyopia
surgery, including multifocal IOLs, PresbyLASIK, and corneal inlays, but we should emphasize that these
techniques are very different from the physiologic status of an untouched eye. A systematic PubMed search
for the keywords “presbylasik”, “multifocal IOL”, and “presbyopic corneal inlay” revealed 634 articles; 124
were controlled clinical trials, 95 were published in the previous 10 years, and 78 were English with available
full text. We reviewed the abstracts and rejected the unrelated articles; other references were included as
needed. This narrative review compares different treatments according to available information on the
optical basis of each treatment modality, including the clinical outcomes such as near, intermediate, and
far visual acuity, spectacles independence, quality of vision, and dysphotopic phenomena.