## Correct Answer: B. Keratoconus Intacs (Intrastromal Corneal Ring Segments) are polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) semicircular rings surgically implanted into the corneal stroma to mechanically reshape the cornea. In **keratoconus**, a progressive ectatic disorder where the cornea thins and cones forward, Intacs work by flattening the apex and redistributing corneal curvature, thereby improving visual acuity and reducing astigmatism. This is particularly valuable in mild-to-moderate keratoconus (Amsler-Krumeich grades I–II) where the patient is not yet a candidate for corneal transplantation. The rings are placed in the mid-peripheral cornea (typically at 5 mm depth), creating a mechanical splinting effect that halts progression and may even reverse some refractive error. In India, where keratoconus has a higher prevalence (especially in certain populations), Intacs offer a reversible, non-ablative alternative to corneal cross-linking or transplantation, allowing patients to defer or avoid more invasive procedures. The procedure is FDA-approved and is increasingly used in Indian tertiary eye care centres as a vision-preserving intervention before corneal scarring becomes irreversible. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Cataract** — Cataract is lens opacity treated by phacoemulsification or manual small-incision surgery (MSICS), not corneal intervention. Intacs are corneal implants and have no role in cataract management. This option confuses anterior segment pathology with corneal refractive surgery. **C. Glaucoma** — Glaucoma is managed by topical medications, laser trabeculoplasty, or filtration surgery to lower intraocular pressure. Intacs do not affect IOP or trabecular outflow. This is a distractor that tests whether students conflate all anterior segment surgeries. **D. Corneal ulcer** — Corneal ulcers (infectious or non-infectious) are treated with topical antibiotics, antivirals, lubricants, and bandage contact lenses or amniotic membrane grafting if needed. Intacs are not used for ulcer healing; they are a refractive reshaping device, not a therapeutic bandage. ## High-Yield Facts - **Intacs** are PMMA semicircular rings implanted at 5 mm corneal depth to mechanically flatten the cone in keratoconus. - Intacs are indicated in **Amsler-Krumeich grades I–II keratoconus** (mild-to-moderate) before corneal scarring or transplant need arises. - **Reversibility** is a key advantage: Intacs can be removed if needed, unlike corneal cross-linking or transplantation. - Intacs improve **visual acuity and reduce astigmatism** by redistributing corneal curvature, but do not halt progression as effectively as corneal cross-linking. - In India, keratoconus prevalence is higher in certain ethnic groups; Intacs offer a vision-preserving bridge before transplant in tertiary centres. ## Mnemonics **INTACS for KC** **I**ntra-stromal **N**on-ablative **T**reatment **A**lternative for **C**orneal **S**haping in keratoconus — mechanical flattening, reversible, grades I–II. **Ring ≠ Pressure** Intacs reshape cornea mechanically (not pressure-lowering like glaucoma surgery); keratoconus is ectasia (cone), not elevated IOP. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "ring" with glaucoma (Ahmed glaucoma valve, Baerveldt) to trap students who confuse all ocular implants. Intacs are corneal, not aqueous-pathway devices. ## Clinical Pearl A 22-year-old Indian male with progressive myopia and astigmatism presents with cone-shaped cornea on slit-lamp; Intacs insertion halts visual decline and defers transplant by 5–10 years, preserving his native cornea for future refractive surgery if needed. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 37 (Cornea & Refractive Surgery); Parson's Diseases of the Eye Ch. 8 (Keratoconus)_
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