Intraocular pressure is currently the only known reliable, modifiable risk factor for the development and progression of glaucoma. Other risk factors for glaucoma include increasing age, myopia, decreased central corneal thickness, and low corneal hysteresis (CH) measurements. Photoablative keratorefractive surgery including laser assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) has become a common way to treat refractive error, with over 25 million procedures performed in the United States alone. Though myopic LASIK has been associated with a decrease in CH measurements, relatively little is known about the risk of LASIK on glaucoma onset and progression. Here we present an observational study of 4 consecutive relatively young and otherwise healthy glaucoma patients with a history of myopic LASIK who showed progression of paracentral visual field deficits at intraocular pressures of 12 mm Hg or less while being carefully monitored. Therefore, these patients required lower targets of intraocular pressure, in the single-digit range, to slow or halt progression. In this cohort, the average corneal hysteresis was more than 2 standard deviations below normal values. This series suggests that additional study into the association of LASIK and glaucoma is warranted, including the potential risk contribution of diminished CH. These studies may be particularly relevant as patients who underwent LASIK procedures in the early 2000s may now be at increased risk of glaucoma due to the risk factor of age.
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