Comparison of tear film dysfunction after phacoemulsification between diabetics and non-diabetics

Effect of diabetes on TBUT after phacoemulsification

Authors

  • Wali Waqar Qureshi Department of Ophthalmology, Fauji Foundation Hospital, Rawalpindi Pakistan, Foundation University Islamabad (FUI), Pakistan
  • Maham Fazal Department of Ophthalmology, Fauji Foundation Hospital, Rawalpindi Pakistan, Foundation University Islamabad (FUI), Pakistan
  • Tehmina Nazir Department of Ophthalmology, Fauji Foundation Hospital, Rawalpindi Pakistan, Foundation University Islamabad (FUI), Pakistan
  • Asfandyar Asghar Department of Ophthalmology, Fauji Foundation Hospital, Rawalpindi Pakistan, Foundation University Islamabad (FUI), Pakistan
  • Naila Obaid Department of Ophthalmology, Fauji Foundation Hospital, Rawalpindi Pakistan, Foundation University Islamabad (FUI), Pakistan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33897/fumj.v7i2.161

Keywords:

Tear film break-up time, diabetic, dry eye, phacoemulsification

Abstract

Objectives: To compare early postoperative tear film break-up time (TBUT) after phacoemulsification between diabetic and non-diabetic cataract patients.

Study design: Quasi-experimental (comparative) study.

Place and duration of study: Ophthalmology Department, Fauji Foundation Hospital, Rawalpindi, Pakistan; July 2024 – September 2024.

Patients and methods: Sixty-six patients scheduled for phacoemulsification with intraocular lens implantation were enrolled by consecutive non-probability sampling: 33 long-standing diabetics (> 5 years) and 33 non-diabetics. Exclusion criteria included prior ocular surface disease, significant meibomian gland dysfunction, prior ocular surgery, topical ocular medication use, or complicated surgery. All surgeries used a 2.8 mm temporal clear corneal incision under topical anesthesia. TBUT was measured at slit lamp using fluorescein one day preoperatively and one day postoperatively. TBUT <10 s was considered abnormal. Statistical analysis employed paired-samples t-tests for within-group comparisons and independent-samples t-tests for between-group comparisons (SPSS v23); p<0.05 was considered significant.

Results: Mean preoperative TBUT did not differ between groups (diabetics 12.70±3.72 seconds; non-diabetics 12.79±3.65 seconds; p=0.92). Postoperatively, TBUT decreased in both groups, with a significantly greater reduction in diabetics (7.36±2.16 seconds) than non-diabetics (10.42±3.56 seconds) (p<0.01).

Conclusion: Diabetic patients experienced a significantly larger early postoperative decline in TBUT following phacoemulsification compared with non-diabetics. Consideration should be given to prophylactic or early postoperative lubricants for diabetic patients to mitigate dry-eye symptoms.

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Published

2025-12-30