ESCRS - PO0484 - Surgical Performance Of The New Quatera Phacoemulsification System In Different Grades Of Cataracts By Surgeons With Variable Degrees Of Skill And Experience

Surgical Performance Of The New Quatera Phacoemulsification System In Different Grades Of Cataracts By Surgeons With Variable Degrees Of Skill And Experience

Published 2023 - 41st Congress of the ESCRS

Reference: PO0484 | Type: Free paper | DOI: 10.82333/ea0h-jw92

Authors: Supriya Samak Sriganesh* 1 , Sri Ganesh 1 , Sheetal Brar 1

1Phaco Refractive Surgery,Nethradhama Eye Hospital,Bangalore,India

Purpose

To evaluate the surgical performance of the new Quatera phacoemulsification system in different grades of cataracts by surgeons  with variable degrees of skill and experience.

Setting

Nethradhama Superspeciality Eye Hospital

Methods

A total of 300 eves (65.96 ÷ 4.37 vears; mean age + standard deviation) underwent phacoemulsification using
the Quatera machine - 100 each by a beginner. intermediate and advanced surgeon. Each surgeon operated 50
eyes of grade 1-2 and 50 eyes of grade 2+ to 4 nuclear sclerosis as per LOCS Ill grading. The parameters
evaluated were effective and total phaco time, chamber stability grading, fluid turnover per case, time taken per
case and complications if any. Postoperative day 1 outcomes were evaluated with respect to uncorrected visual
acuity, IOP, corneal clarity, AC reaction and IOL position.

Results

Preoperatively, the mean grade of cataract density in the soft cataract group differed significantly between the
surgeons (p<0.001) but was comparable in the hard cataract group (p=0.451). The mean anterior chamber
stability score was comparable both in the soft cataract group (p=0.765) and hard cataract group (p=0.157).
There was no significant surge noted in any of the cases. There were no intraoperative complications in the soft
cataract group for any surgeon. In the hard cataract group, grade 1 wound burn was noted in 6 cases whereas
one case operated by the beginner surgeon had grade 2 wound burn which required suturing. Post operatively,
IOL was found to be stable in all cases.

Conclusions

The new Quatera phacoemulsification system demonstrates excellent chamber stability, good safety and efficacy when used by all surgeons of varying skill levels.