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The Eight‑Chop Technique in Cataract Surgery: A Conceptual and Narrative Review of a Segmentation‑First Strategy.

Created on 08 Jul 2026

Authors

Tsuyoshi Sato

Published in

Clinical ophthalmology (Auckland, N.Z.). Volume 20. Pages 624182. Epub Jul 03, 2026.

Abstract

To review the conceptual evolution, mechanical principles, and clinical performance of the Eight-Chop Technique and to clarify its role within contemporary cataract surgery.
This narrative, concept‑driven review summarizes the historical development of nuclear fragmentation strategies, including sculpting-based techniques, divide-and-conquer, chop-based methods, femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgery, and prechop techniques. A non‑systematic literature search of PubMed and Google Scholar was performed for articles published between 1991 and 2025 using combinations of the terms "cataract", "phacoemulsification", "nuclear fragmentation", "phaco-chop", "prechop", and "eight-chop". Adult human cataract surgery studies and key conceptual articles on nuclear segmentation and intraoperative fluidics were selectively included. Because most available clinical reports originate from the originating surgeon and closely affiliated groups, the evidence base is limited and heterogeneous, and formal systematic evidence synthesis was not attempted. Particular attention was directed toward the wedge-induced fracture mechanism, geometric optimization through eightfold nuclear division, and compatibility with modern fluidics systems. Published clinical studies together with the author's clinical experience were reviewed across a broad spectrum of cataract subtypes.
In both standard cataracts and challenging conditions-including hard nuclear cataracts, white cataracts, small pupils, shallow anterior chamber, microcornea, diabetic eyes, and pseudoexfoliation syndrome-the Eight-Chop Technique has been reported to be associated with reduced phaco time, cumulative dissipated energy, and irrigation volume compared with conventional techniques. Corneal endothelial cell density loss was generally limited to approximately 0.9-6.7%, even in high-risk subgroups. Postoperative intraocular pressure also demonstrated sustained reduction during mid- to long-term follow-up. These findings are encouraging but preliminary and may partly reflect surgeon experience, case selection, and contemporary phacoemulsification platforms.
The Eight‑Chop Technique is a segmentation‑first nuclear fragmentation strategy based on complete in‑the‑bag prefragmentation using a wedge‑induced fracture mechanism. Its conceptual compatibility with modern fluidics systems, including active fluidics platforms, may contribute to improved anterior chamber stability and a minimally invasive surgical profile. However, because current evidence is derived largely from single‑surgeon and closely affiliated studies, the clinical advantages of the Eight‑Chop Technique should be regarded as provisional. Independent, multicenter validation and randomized comparative trials are required before definitive conclusions can be drawn regarding its overall clinical superiority and generalizability.

PMID:
42416895
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 08 Jul 2026.

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