
PurposeTo explore the objective functional visual outcomes of cataract surgery in patients with good preoperative visual acuity.MethodsWe enrolled 130 cataract patients whose best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was 20/40 or better preoperatively. Objective visual functions were evaluated with a KR-1W analyzer before and at 1 month after cataract surgery.ResultsThe nuclear (N), cortical (C), and N+C groups had very high preoperative ocular and internal total high-order aberrations (HOAs), coma, and abnormal spherical aberrations. At 1 month after cataract surgery, in addition to the remarkable increase of both uncorrected visual acuity and BCVA, both ocular and internal HOAs in the three groups decreased significantly after cataract surgery (all P<0.05). Point spread function and modulation transfer functions were also improved significantly in these patients (all P<0.05).ConclusionsThe objective functional vision of patients with 20/40 or better preoperative BCVA improved significantly after cataract surgery. This finding shows that the arbitrary threshold of BCVA worse than 20/40 in China cannot always be used to determine who will benefit from cataract surgery.
Male, Analysis of Variance, Visual Acuity, Cataract Extraction, Middle Aged, Cataract, Axial Length, Eye, Sensory Thresholds, Preoperative Period, Humans, Female, Aged
Male, Analysis of Variance, Visual Acuity, Cataract Extraction, Middle Aged, Cataract, Axial Length, Eye, Sensory Thresholds, Preoperative Period, Humans, Female, Aged
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