The Relationship of Tear Film Instability and Higher-Order Aberrations to Refractive Variability - Report - MDSpire

The Relationship of Tear Film Instability and Higher-Order Aberrations to Refractive Variability

  • By

  • Jade Coats, OD

  • March 2, 2026

  • 8 min

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Tear Film Instability and Higher-Order Aberrations Impact Refractive Variability

Overview

Tear film instability, particularly in dry eye disease, contributes to higher-order aberrations (HOAs) that cause fluctuating vision and inconsistent refractive measurements. Addressing ocular surface inflammation before refractive assessment improves measurement accuracy and patient satisfaction.

Background

Accurate refractive measurement is essential for prescribing glasses, fitting contact lenses, and planning refractive or cataract surgery. The tear film, as the eye's most anterior refractive surface, plays a critical role in optical quality. Tear film instability disrupts this surface, leading to microfluctuations in corneal curvature and refractive power. This instability is driven by chronic ocular surface inflammation, creating a cycle that degrades tear film integrity and optical stability.

Data Highlights

Wavefront aberrometry shows that HOAs increase progressively during the interblink interval, with minimal aberrations immediately after blinking and increased wavefront error as tear film breaks up. Autorefraction measurements fluctuate in sphere, cylinder, and axis in patients with tear film instability, reflecting true optical instability rather than instrument noise. Corneal topography and keratometry are less reliable without a stable tear film, often showing distorted mires and irregular astigmatism patterns.

Key Findings

  • Tear film instability leads to increased higher-order aberrations that degrade retinal image quality.
  • HOAs worsen progressively between blinks due to tear film breakup and evaporation.
  • Refractive measurements (objective and subjective) become inconsistent and less repeatable in the presence of tear film instability.
  • Ocular surface inflammation underlies tear film instability and must be treated to restore optical stability.
  • Untreated tear film instability results in inaccurate prescriptions, patient dissatisfaction, and increased remakes.
  • Optimizing the ocular surface before refraction improves measurement accuracy, repeatability, and patient outcomes.

Clinical Implications

Clinicians should prioritize diagnosing and treating ocular surface inflammation and tear film instability before performing refractive assessments. Stabilizing the tear film reduces higher-order aberrations, enhances the reliability of objective and subjective measurements, and leads to more accurate prescriptions. This approach minimizes patient dissatisfaction and reduces the need for costly remakes and follow-up visits.

Conclusion

Tear film instability significantly contributes to refractive variability through increased higher-order aberrations. Addressing ocular surface health prior to refractive measurement is essential for achieving stable, accurate, and reproducible visual outcomes.

References

  1. Source/Year -- The Relationship of Tear Film Instability and Higher-Order Aberrations to Refractive Variability

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