Panagiotopoulou Eirini-Kanella, Ntonti Panagiota, Vlachou Eleni, Georgantzoglou Kimon, Labiris Georgios
Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital of Alexandroupolis, Dragana, Alexandroupolis, Greece.
Acta Medica (Hradec Kralove). 2018;61(4):115-124. doi: 10.14712/18059694.2018.129.
It is common knowledge that there are patients who have an uncomplicated cataract surgery with an actual improvement of their visual acuity, but they are dissatisfied with their final visual capacity. It is hypothesized that patients' preoperative expectations play a significant role in their postoperative perceptions. A systematic review of the recent literature regarding preoperative expectations of patients before lens extraction surgery and their postoperative perceptions as regards the visual outcome was performed based on the PubMed, Medline, Google Scholar, American Academy of Ophthalmology, Nature and Springer databases in September 2017 and data from 14 descriptive and 7 comparative studies were included in this narrative review. The objective of this review is the determination of the relationship between preoperative expectations and postoperative perception of visual outcome, as well as the investigation of predictors of patient satisfaction by understanding the factors that determine preoperative patient expectations. A considerable number of studies evaluate patient expectations before cataract surgery and compare them with postoperative patient perceptions. In conclusion, the final patient's postoperative perception could be affected both by the actual outcome of the operation and by patient preoperative expectations. Ocular and systemic comorbidity, unrealistic expectations, preoperative spectacle independence, the cost of surgery, and a previous cataract surgery as well as the level of health literacy and age could influence preoperative expectations and predict more accurately patient satisfaction. Taking these factors into consideration could allow surgeons to control the expectations with an extensive preoperative counseling.
众所周知,有些患者白内障手术过程顺利,视力也确实有所提高,但他们对最终的视觉能力仍不满意。据推测,患者的术前期望在其术后感知中起着重要作用。2017年9月,基于PubMed、Medline、谷歌学术、美国眼科学会、《自然》和施普林格数据库,对近期有关晶状体摘除手术前患者的术前期望及其术后视觉结果感知的文献进行了系统综述,本叙述性综述纳入了14项描述性研究和7项比较研究的数据。本综述的目的是确定术前期望与术后视觉结果感知之间的关系,并通过了解决定患者术前期望的因素来调查患者满意度的预测因素。相当多的研究评估了白内障手术前患者的期望,并将其与术后患者的感知进行比较。总之,患者术后的最终感知可能会受到手术实际结果和患者术前期望的影响。眼部和全身合并症、不切实际的期望、术前不依赖眼镜、手术费用、既往白内障手术以及健康素养水平和年龄等因素可能会影响术前期望,并更准确地预测患者满意度。考虑这些因素可以让外科医生通过广泛的术前咨询来控制患者的期望。