Compensation of corneal oblique astigmatism by internal optics: a theoretical analysis

ConclusionsPartial compensation of corneal astigmatism by internal optics is due mainly to the highly converging nature of wavefronts incident upon the lens resulting from corneal refraction. The degree of compensation is quadratically dependent on eccentricity but is expected to diminish as the eye accommodates. Neutralising the cornea by index‐matching defeats internal compensation, revealing classical, radially‐oriented oblique astigmatism in the isolated lens.
Source: Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics - Category: Opthalmology Authors: Tags: Feature Issue Article Source Type: research