Lynn M J, Waring G O, Nizam A, Kutner M H, Culbertson W, McDonald M B, Meyers W D, Naidoff M A, Nelson J D, Obstbaum S A
PERK Statistical and Clinical Coordinating Centers, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Ga.
Refract Corneal Surg. 1989 Mar-Apr;5(2):75-81.
In the Prospective Evaluation of Radial Keratotomy (PERK) study, the symmetry of refractive and visual acuity outcome was analyzed in 269 patients with bilateral radial keratotomy with a single operation in each eye. Patients were required to wait 1 year after surgery on the first eye before having surgery on the second eye. At 1 year after surgery on the second eye, 98% of patients had 3.00 diopters or less difference between their two eyes in the spherical equivalent of the cycloplegic refraction (100% before surgery), and 96% of patients had 3.00 D or less difference between their two eyes in the amount of refractive power in the vertical meridian (100% before surgery). Thus, surgically induced refractive anisometropia was not a major complication in the PERK study. However, 14% of patients had four to eight Snellen lines difference in the uncorrected visual acuity between their two eyes (1% before surgery), emphasizing that induced asymmetry of refraction is a potential clinical problem for some patients.