Keratectasia severity staging and progression assessment based on the biomechanical E-staging.

IF 4.1 1区 医学 Q1 OPHTHALMOLOGY Eye and Vision Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1186/s40662-024-00392-3
Elias Flockerzi, Berthold Seitz
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Abstract

Until recently, corneal topography has been the gold standard in detecting keratectasia and monitoring its progression. The recently introduced ABCD tomographic keratoconus staging system focuses on anterior ("A") and posterior ("B") radius of curvature, thinnest corneal thickness ("C"), best-corrected visual acuity with spectacles ("D") and is supplemented with the introduction of the biomechanical E-staging (BEST, "E"). The need for biomechanical staging arose from the fact of altered biomechanical characteristics of keratectasia in comparison to healthy corneas. Ectatic corneas usually exhibit a biomechanical weakening and greater deformation than healthy corneas when exposed to a biomechanical stressor such as a standardized air puff indentation as provided by the Corvis ST® (CST, Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany). The BEST is based on the linear term of the Corvis Biomechanical Index (CBI) and provides a biomechanical keratoconus severity staging and progression assessment within the CST software. This review traces the development of the BEST as an addition to the tomographic ABCD staging system and highlights its strengths and limitations when applied in daily practice for the detection, monitoring and progression assessment in keratectasia.

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基于生物力学 E 分期的角化病严重程度分期和进展评估。
直到最近,角膜地形图一直是检测角膜异位症和监测其进展的黄金标准。最近推出的 ABCD 层析角膜地形图分期系统侧重于前曲率("A")和后曲率("B")半径、最薄角膜厚度("C")、戴眼镜后的最佳矫正视力("D"),并辅以生物力学 E 分期(BEST,"E")。与健康角膜相比,角膜病变的生物力学特征发生了改变,因此需要进行生物力学分期。与健康角膜相比,外生性角膜在受到生物力学应力(如 Corvis ST® (CST, Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany) 提供的标准化气囊压痕)时,通常会表现出生物力学减弱和更大的变形。BEST 以 Corvis 生物力学指数 (CBI) 的线性项为基础,在 CST 软件中提供了生物力学角膜病严重程度分期和进展评估。本综述回顾了 BEST 作为断层扫描 ABCD 分期系统的补充的发展历程,并强调了其在日常应用于角膜病的检测、监测和进展评估时的优势和局限性。
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来源期刊
Eye and Vision
Eye and Vision OPHTHALMOLOGY-
CiteScore
8.60
自引率
2.40%
发文量
89
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: Eye and Vision is an open access, peer-reviewed journal for ophthalmologists and visual science specialists. It welcomes research articles, reviews, methodologies, commentaries, case reports, perspectives and short reports encompassing all aspects of eye and vision. Topics of interest include but are not limited to: current developments of theoretical, experimental and clinical investigations in ophthalmology, optometry and vision science which focus on novel and high-impact findings on central issues pertaining to biology, pathophysiology and etiology of eye diseases as well as advances in diagnostic techniques, surgical treatment, instrument updates, the latest drug findings, results of clinical trials and research findings. It aims to provide ophthalmologists and visual science specialists with the latest developments in theoretical, experimental and clinical investigations in eye and vision.
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