Keratoplasty (Corneal Transplant)
WHAT IS CORNEAL TRANSPLANT (KERATOPLASTY)?
A corneal transplant, or Keratoplasty, is a surgical procedure that replaces a damaged or diseased cornea with healthy tissue from a donor.
The corneal tissue comes from a recently deceased, registered tissue donor.
These corneal tissues are thoroughly assessed by various international Eye banks to determine the quality of tissue and to rule out other diseases like Hepatitis, HIV and other infections.
Eye banks ensure that the material does not grow any bacteria and puts them through stringent quality control before releasing the corneas. The diseased cornea is then replaced by a healthy one.
What are the indications of Corneal Transplant?
-Keratoconus
-Corneal scar due to previous injury or infection
-Corneal dystrophy or corneal degeneration
-Any cataract surgery where cornea is decompensated
-Any hepatitis Keratitis healed keratitis
What is the success rate of the Keratoplasty operation?
Compared to other transplants in the body, such as lung transplants, liver transplants, bone marrow transplants etc. Corneal transplants have the highest success rates because the cornea does not have a blood supply so the chances of rejection are removed.
In our experience, corneal transplant has a success rate of more than 95%. In order to achieve good results, it is essential to get good donor tissue which Laser Eye Centre insists on.
Once the operation has been completed, patients must attend regular follow-up appointments and will need to keep adding special eye-drops to keep the new cornea healthy.
There are two types of Keratoplasty operation:
1. Traditional Penetrating Keratoplasty (PKP)
2. Lamellar Keratoplasty
KERATOPLA TESTIMONIAL
Alakh Kohli
The procedure was quickly and professionally done. I did not have to stay overnight in a medical facility which I found very convenient. My vision has now been restored and I am very happy! Thank you to Laser Eye Centre team for such wonderful results! I highly recommend Dr. Joshi for anyone who needs a corneal transplant done!
VIDEO
TESTIMONIAL
Ryan Nathaa
1. PENETRATING CORNEAL TRANSPLANT (PKP KERATOPLASTY)
PKP is done when the endothelium of the cornea has ruptured causing it to become cloudy.
This cloudiness is because of
the aqueous humor. Penetrating Keratoplasty is where whole graft of the
cornea (only epithelium and superficial stroma) is removed from the
recipient and replaced by a donor tissue then microscopic stitches are
taken this is old but good technique which is also offered by Laser Eye
Centre.
The above pictures show a patient who has had Penetrating Keratoplasty surgery.
The latest breakthrough in Keratoplasty is known as Lamellar Keratoplasty. There two types of Keratoplasty
-Manual Keratoplasty known as big bubble and the latest is Laser Assisted Lamellar Keratoplasty
THE LATEST INNOVATION IN KERATOPLASTY OPERATION: LASER ASSISTED CORNEAL TRANSPLANT (CLAT)
2. CORNEAL LAMELLAR ABLATION TRANSPLANT (CLAT)
Laser Eye Centre is the first
Centre in East and Central Africa to offer this new technique. This is
non-penetrative, and we retain the original bed of the recipient,
replacing only the damaged keratonic cornea, leading to a remote chance
of graft rejection and quick recovery.
Under the guidance of
Tomography the Keratoconic cornea is ablated all around keeping 200
micron posterior bed intact. Ablation of the recipient is done under
Topical anesthesia with IRES 1000Hz IVIS laser and suturing of donor and
recipient cornea is done under Peribulbar anesthesia. Similarly, donor
cornea is prepared ablating from the endothelium side matching the
recipient and interrupted microscopic sutures are taken.
This is done with IRES 1000Hz laser of IVIS technologies.
Tomography showing advanced Keratoconus
Tomography Test: This is the initial and final step of a close-loop surgical process that starts with the collection of the individual’ patient corneal data to plan the surgery. The Precisio will take the mapping of the cornea and diagnose Keratoconus.
PREPARATION OF RECIPIENT CORNEA
The receiving bed is created by calculating the intersection of the Pachymetry map and the Ideal Corneal Bed for the patient. This irregular volume is removed with the iRES laser
The new uniform thickness receiving bed now takes on membrane properties…
…with no cross sectional rigidity
Recipient Ablation Profile
Laser Machine is removing Keratoconus Tissue from the Recipient (Corneal Ablation).
PLEASE NOTE THE RING, THE ABLATION IS ONLY IN THE INNER PART OF THE RING.
PREPARATION OF DONOR CORNEA
The surgeon resizes the donor cornea thickness with the iRES laser from the endothelial surface by the amount of the residual cornea receiving bed thickness
The iRES laser will use a laser trephination function to cut the donor perimeter to be precisely dimensioned to the diameter of the receiving bed.
The donor is inverted for positioning…
RoMA CUSTOM TRANSPLANTATION
IVIS SUITE PLATFORM
MOIST CHAMBER FOR DONOR CORNEA.
Donor cornea is placed under the laser machine with endothelial surface facing upwards. Here laser machine is preparing donor button to match the recipient and stored in the moist chamber.
Slit Lamp image of a patient who has undergone Laser Assisted Lamellar Keratoplasty (CLAT)
Advantages of Laser Assisted Lamellar Keratoplasty (CLAT):
- The Keratoconus is usually on the anterior 3/4 of corneal stroma and the healthier posterior stroma is reserved unlike big bubble technique
- Non-Perforative surgery
- Quicker and better healing
- Remote or fewer chances of graft rejection
- Less chances of Astigmatism than PKP
- Easy availability of tissue
- Clear interface
- After the Laser Assisted Lamellar Keratoplasty, the cornea is of uniform thickness and thicker than the big bubble technique so at a later stage surgical induced Astigmatism can be corrected to improve the patient’s vision.
In Conjunction with the Swiss
Embassy, the Rotary club of Nairobi has started a charitable new
project where free Laser assisted corneal transplants will be done for
patients who are not able to afford this treatment, Laser Eye Centre and
Dr. Mukesh Joshi will be offering their services free of charge.
Good news for previous corneal transplant patients; with laser, we can correct irregularities in the cornea to improve vision.
If the corneal transplant has
already been done and the patient is not seeing very well, what can be
done? If the cornea is clear and there is no rejection and the retina is
normal, meaning there is irregular corneal distortion (post corneal
transplant astigmatism), what can be done?
With the latest technology of
C-Ten Laser available at Laser Eye Centre we can reshape the old
corneal transplant and remove irregularities of the cornea so that
vision can be improved rather than repeating a complete corneal
transplant.
Laser Eye Centre’s Medical
Director Dr. Mukesh Joshi is a pioneer of Keratoplasty in East Africa
and has been performing transplants in Kenya for the last three decades.
Laser Eye Centre was also the first centre to carry out Penetrating
Keratoplasty as well as being the only Centre in East and Central Africa
offering Laser assisted Corneal Transplant (CLAT).