Résumé : | SIGNIFICANCE: Highly irregular cornea leads to poor vision, glare, and starbursts. Although treatment is still at the exploration stage, topography-guided Contoura surgery has excellent potential for the treatment of highly irregular corneas. PURPOSE: This case series reviews three patients (one with abnormal back elevation, one with corneal scar after fungal keratitis, and one with post–laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis central islands) treated with topography-guided Contoura surgery. CASE REPORTS: In case 1, a 19-year-old man underwent topography-guided Contoura refractive surgery in the left eye and wavefront-optimized ablation in the right eye. Post-operative topography of the right eye showed marked inferior steepening and central irregular astigmatism compared with the contralateral eye. In case 2, a 53-yearold man presented with corneal scarring on the right eye after recovering from fungal keratitis. The patient first underwent phototherapeutic keratectomy and photorefractive keratectomy to remove the scarring primarily. He then underwent Contoura to correct hyperopia, which flattened the cornea and improved his vision significantly. In case 3, a 25-year-old man presented with central steepening on topography maps after undergoing laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis. He underwent topography-guided ablation, which improved his visual acuity and normalized the cornea. CONCLUSIONS: Therapy for highly irregular corneas includes wavefront-guided surgery, conservative treatment, corneal transplantation, rigid gas-permeable lenses, and so on. In this case series, topography-guided Contoura refractive surgery provided an excellent option for reducing topographic abnormalities and improving vision. |