Haw. Code R. § 17-1737-92 - Corneal transplant (keratoplasty)
(a) Indications of
penetrating keratoplasty include:
(1) Corneal
opacification that sufficiently obscures visibility (vision) through the
anterior segment of the eye with at least light perception present. Causes for
this problem include:
(A) Corneal injury and
scarring;
(B) Corneal degeneration
(from Fuch's or other dystrophy or from previous cataract or intraocular lens
implantation, or both);
(C) Corneal
degeneration from keratoconus or familial causes;
(D) Corneal infection (e.g., herpes); and
(2) Therapeutic graft
for relief of pain with at least light perception vision present, from corneal
degeneration because of inflammation with pain in the eye and useful vision
still present.
(b)
Indications of lemellar keratoplasty include:
(1) Superficial layer corneal scarring and
deformity due to:
(A) Trauma;
(B) Degeneration;
(C) Infection; or
(D) Congenital deformity
(anterior);
(2)
Aphakia;
(3) High myopia;
(4) High refractive error;
(5) Keratoconus; and
(6) Recurrent pterygium.
(c) Conditions and limitations affecting
corneal transplant include:
(1) A relative
contraindication is intractable glaucoma in the eye under consideration for
surgery;
(2) No active eye
infection at the time of surgery;
(3) No general medical contraindications to
surgery or anesthesia;
(4) Informed
consent shall be obtained from the patient or patient's representative;
and
(5) No age
restriction.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.