Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2019)

Light exposure from microscope versus intracameral illumination during cataract surgery

  • Yu Jeong Kim,
  • Dong Heun Nam,
  • Young Jae Kim,
  • Kwang Gi Kim,
  • Seong-Woo Kim,
  • Tae-Young Chung,
  • Sung Jin Lee,
  • Kyu Hyung Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijo.IJO_316_19
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67, no. 10
pp. 1624 – 1627

Abstract

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Purpose: To evaluate light exposure from microscope versus intracameral illuminations to patient's and surgeon's retina during cataract surgery. Methods: Thirty consecutive patients who had cataract surgery using microscope and intracameral illuminations. At the point of the ocular of an operating microscope, optical illuminance and irradiance from the microscope illumination (60, 40, 20% intensity) and the intracameral illumination (60% intensity) were measured using a light meter and a spectrometer at a pause after lens capsule polishing in cataract surgery. Results: Average illuminance (lux) was 1.46, 0.66, 0.27, and 0.1 from 60%, 40%, 20% intensity microscope illuminations and 60% intracameral illumination. Average total spectral irradiance (μW/cm2) was 1.25, 0.65, 0.26, and 0.03 from 60%, 40%, 20% intensity microscope illuminations and 60% intracameral illumination. Conclusion: Microscope ocular illuminance and irradiance during cataract surgery were higher in the microscope illumination than in the intracameral illumination. It suggests that light exposure reaching patient's and surgeon's retina during cataract surgery is lower in the intracameral illumination than in the microscope illumination.

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