Dr. Kevin Niksarli New York City Vision Surgeon
Nationally recognized for creating outstanding laser vision correction results, Dr. Kevin Niksarli is among the best eye surgeons in New York City. His expertise and deep understanding of LASIK vision correction procedures has earned him a reputation of excellence among other top eye surgeons who visit Dr. Niksarli for all their vision correction needs. The mission of Kevin Niksarli, MD, is to provide each NYC eye surgery patient with the highest standard of surgical care and individualized treatment using the latest minimally invasive techniques and revolutionary laser vision correction equipment. To learn more about Kevin Niksarli and his Manhattan state-of-the-art vision correction surgical suite, please read one of his press releases below.
Manhattan Lasik Center Surgeon Dr. Kevin Niksarli, M.D. Comments on Higher Order Aberrations in Normal Eyes Measured With Three Different Aberrometers
Kevin Niksarli, M.D. of Manhattan LASIK Center states that the study suggested that no instrument was superior over the others, and all three instruments were very reliable.
New York, NY (PRWEB) April 10, 2009 -- Board Certified Eye Surgeon Dr. Kevin Niksarli, M.D. of Manhattan Lasik Center, assesses the repeatability of measurements of higher order aberrations using three different aberrometers and to compare higher order aberration measurements between optical path difference (OPD) scanning and the Hartmann-Shack method. The study was designed and conducted with collaboration of Drs. Ahmet Burakgazi, Bernard Tinio, Alejandro Bababyan, Kevin Niksarli, and Penny Asbell.
Wavefront aberration data obtained using the NIDEK OPD-Scan, Bausch & Lomb Zywave wavefront aberrometer, and VISX CustomVue wavefront analyzer were compared. A total of 19 subjects were included in the study. Repeatability errors in all three machines were found to be low, suggesting that all three machines are reliable in their repeated measurements. Significant differences were demonstrated between OPD scanning and Hartmann-Shack aberrometers. All three machines showed statistically significant differences in several higher order aberration parameters when compared to each other.
Dr. Kevin Niksarli, M.D. of Manhattan Lasik Center, concludes that the three different aberrometers provided repeatable measurements, but statistical differences were noted in the measurement of higher order aberrations when comparing the machines. The study suggested that no instrument was superior over the others, and all three instruments were very reliable.