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WebMD Health News

Saturday, January 07, 2006

Another Option for Treating Myopia
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Folks with significant nearsightedness (myopia) now have another treatment option. Traditional spectacles optically shift the visual image onto the retina but these are often heavy and unattractive eyeglasses (think Henry Kissinger). Besides, there are all kinds of optical aberrations that emerge with 'high minus' corrections.

Soft and hard contact lenses eliminate these drawbacks and are very popular except for those with a history of previous corneal inflammation or dry eyes.

Refractive surgery was invented for myopes. Nearsightedness can be greatly reduced with tiny corneal incisions, silicone bands, corneal flaps, laser ablation or any combination of the above. Unfortunately these refractive surgery procedures do not always fully correct the refractive error. Patients often need eyeglasses afterwards. Hmmmm...spend $2000 and still need new glasses?!?

Extreme nearsightedness can be reversed by surgically removing the natural lens inside the eye. Think of it as removing an +18.00 diopter lens from the eye. Removing the eye's own lens also removes the eye's ability to see things up close (accommodation). Life is full of tradeoffs. Clear lens extraction is the same operative procedure as cataract surgery except there is no cataract, however, all of the potential complications of cataract surgery persist!

You may have recently heard about the Visian implantable lens - a different kind of artificial intraocular lens. The Visian implantable lens is a foldable device that is surgically inserted through a tiny corneal incision. It opens up and rests between the colored iris and the natural lens. The neat thing about this approach is that all of the nearsightedness can be eliminated without sacrificing the eye's ability to accommodate because the procedure preserves the eye's natural lens. That's important for anyone wanting to read the fine print!

No surgery is perfect for every patient and some patients are not good candidates for any surgery. Having said that, it's always good to know that options exist.

Related Topics:
Implanted Lens Approved for Nearsightedness, Implantable Contact Lenses Safe, Effective

Posted by: Dr. Lloyd at 12:06 PM

3 Comments:

Anonymous twalker said...

It seems there's always other options mentioned for myopia.
I'm farsighted. Are there any other options for me beside glasses and contacts?
Does this eye training work?
My eyes: L-20/100; R-20/40
thx

11:53 AM  
Blogger Wally Shipp said...

I'd like to know why this occurred & hope you might have some input.

I wore glasses for nearsightedness (20/40-20/70)from 10 yrs. old till age 38, when I started to have some eyestrain. Went to an opthamologist -- & while I was waiting -- read the 20/20 chart w/o my specs. The physician confirmed my acuity & urged me to take a glucose tolerance test, but my NY physician nixed it. I put my eyeglasses away.

Fast forward 29 years: I still don't wear myopia glasses, see everything clearly, have had an unconditional driver's license & excellent health test results since then.

Because I wore prescription glasses all those years, I wear non-prescription sunglasses most of the time today. In the last few years, I also wear low-strength (1.0) reading glasses for computer & paperwork.

My question: Have you seen this before? Is there a phenomenon I can refer my younger generations to, some of whom wear corrective eyewear? Or was my case a fluke?

Thanx,

W

11:39 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Congrats Wally, I hope that happens to me!

6:21 PM  

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