Purpose: To evaluate the influence of posterior capsule opacification (PCO) on optical coherence tomography (OCT) acquisition of macular retinal thickness (RT) and volume using time domain OCT (TD-OCT) and spectral domain OCT (SD-OCT).
Materials and methods: We studied 37 eyes of 31 patients with PCO. Each patient underwent an evaluation with TD-OCT and with SD-OCT before and after Nd:YAG capsulotomy. We recorded RT and retinal volume in the macular area using only good quality images.
Results: Best corrected visual acuity improved in all eyes after Nd:YAG capsulotomy, with the degree of improvement ranging from 0.3 ± 0.7 to 0.1 ±0.7 (p = 0.01). Before the treatment, only 27% of the examinations were valuable with TD-OCT, while using SD-OCT, it was possible to obtain an examination of suitable quality both before and after the Yag laser capsulotomy in 100% of the eyes. We did not observe significant differences between mean preoperative and postoperative RT and total macular volume measurements, neither with TD-OCT nor with SD-OCT. RT and total macular volume values obtained using TD-OCT were always lower than those obtained from the SD-OCT, both before and after capsulotomy.
Conclusions: Our study confirmed that with old generation TD-OCT, PCO has a strong negative influence on the quality of OCT acquisition, and examination is reliable only when it is possible to acquire good quality images. With new generation SD-OCT, tomographic acquisitions are always reliable and are not influenced by the presence of PCO.
Keywords: Optical coherence tomography; posterior capsule opacification; quality of acquisition; spectral domain; time domain.