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Comprehensive Eye Care Information from EyeCare24.com

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Eyeglasses Adjustment after Eye Cataract Operation

Spectacles

Until the advent of contact lenses or intraocular lens implants spectacles were the only means of achieving a finely focused image on the retina after a cataract operation. Although in many cases this is most satisfactory, there are limitations to such correction. At first some patients find that wearing thick cataract glasses causes a number of problems which arise from magnification of the image, distortion in the peripheral part of vision, and some limitation of the field of clear vision.

These all result from the spectacle lens itself rather than from the operation. Read the rest of this entry »

After Eye Cataract Operation and Contact Lenses Wearing Tips

The problems of cataract glasses result from the fact that a thick lens has to be worn in front of the eye. The nearer to the eye the lens is worn, the less will be the magnification. Nearly all the problems of cataract glasses can be eliminated if a contact lens is worn.

Because the contact lens is worn on the cornea itself, the problems of magnification almost disappear, although not entirely. Read the rest of this entry »

Eye Cataractous Intraocular Lenses

In an ideal world the best way to restore an eye to normal would be to replace the cataractous lens with a clear one of the same power lying in the position from which the original lens was removed.

At the Oxford Ophthalmological Congress the eye surgeon Harold Ridley reported the results of eight operations that he had performed to insert a Perspex lens. He thus founded a completely new branch of ophthalmic surgery. Ridley had treated many ocular injuries suffered by members of the Royal Air Force during World War II. Aircraft windshields (made of Perspex) had shattered after explosions or the impact of bullets, and Perspex fragments had penetrated the eyes of plane crews. Ridley had noticed how inert Perspex was in the eye and how little inflammation it caused. Read the rest of this entry »

Dos and Don’ts Following Eye Cataract Surgery

For the first two weeks or so of the immediate postoperative period vigorous activity is discouraged. Stooping, lifting heavy objects, sneezing or coughing, and any very violent physical effort should be avoided. Any activity that makes the patient feel that his collar is too tight or that his neck is swelling should be stopped because movements which cause congestion in the head also provoke an increase in pressure within the eye. Until the wound is properly healed this could lead to its leaking, to haemorrhage, to poor healing, and, in the worst event, to loss of the eye. After two weeks, however, the surgical wound should be well healed. At the routine outpatient visit which should be made at this time, the state of healing will be assessed by the surgeon, who will tell the patient what physical activities may be undertaken. Read the rest of this entry »

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