| |
 |
Cataract
Cataract
A cataract is a loss of
transparency, or clouding, of the normally clear lens of
the eye. As one ages, chemical changes occur in the lens
that make it less transparent. The loss of transparency
may be so mild vision is hardly affected or so severe
that no shapes or movements are seen, only light and
dark. When the lens gets cloudy enough to obstruct
vision to any significant degree, it is called a
cataract. Glasses or contact lenses cannot sharpen your
vision if a cataract is present.
The most common cause of cataract is aging. Other causes
include trauma, medications such as steroids, systemic
diseases such as diabetes and prolonged exposure to
ultraviolet light. Occasionally, babies are born with a
cataract.
Reducing the amount of ultraviolet light exposure by
wearing a wide-brim hat and sunglasses may reduce your
risk for developing a cataract but once developed there
is no cure except to have the cataract surgically
removed. Outpatient surgical procedures can remove the
cataract through either a small incision (phacoemulsification)
or a large incision (extracapsular extraction). The time
to have the surgical procedure is when your vision is
bad enough that it interferes with your lifestyle.
Cataract surgery is a very successful operation. One and
a half million people have this procedure every year and
95% have a successful result. As with any surgical
procedure, complications can occur during or after
surgery and some are severe enough to limit vision. But
in most cases, vision, as well as quality of life,
improves. |
|
|
Cataract Symptoms
Your eye works a lot like a camera.
Light rays focus through your lens on the retina, a
layer of light sensitive cells at the back of the eye.
Similar to film, the retina allows the image to be
"seen" by the brain. But over time the lens can become
cloudy and prevent light rays from passing clearly
through the lens. This cloudy lens is called a cataract.
The typical symptom of cataract formation is a slow,
progressive, and painless decrease in vision. Other
changes include: blurring of vision; glare, particularly
at night; frequent eyeglass prescription change; a
decrease in color intensity; a yellowing of images; and
in rare cases, double vision.
Ironically as the lens gets harder, farsighted or
hyperopic people experience improved distance vision and
are less dependent on glasses. However, nearsighted or
myopic people become more nearsighted or myopic, causing
distance vision to be worse. Some types of cataracts
affect distance vision more than reading vision. Others
affect reading vision more than distance vision. |
|
|
Extracapsular Cataract
Extraction (ECCE)
Extracapsular cataract extraction
is a method for surgically removing a cataract, which is
a clouding of the eye's naturally clear lens. A cloudy
lens interferes with light passing through to the
retina, the light-sensing layer of cells at the back of
the eye. Having a cataract can be compared to looking at
the world through a foggy window.
In extracapsular extraction, an incision is made in the
side of the cornea at the point where the cornea and
sclera, the white part of the eye, meet. Carefully
entering the eye through the incision, the surgeon
gently opens the front of the lens capsule and removes
the hard center, or nucleus, of the lens. The soft lens
cortex is then suctioned out leaving the back of the
capsule in place.
An incision requiring sutures is necessary because the
lens is removed in one piece. A plastic implant called
an intraocular lens, or IOL, is substituted for the
original lens. The implanted IOL allows light to be
focused on the retina.
It may be up to six weeks before the sutures are removed
and best-corrected vision is achieved. During recovery,
it may be necessary to avoid bending over or lifting
heavy objects.
|
|
|
Intraocular Lenses (IOLs)
An intraocular
lens (IOL) is a tiny, lightweight, clear plastic disk placed
in the eye during cataract surgery. An IOL replaces the
focusing power of the eye's natural lens.
The lens of the eye plays an important role in focusing
images on the retina. If the lens loses its clarity, as it
does when a cataract develops, light rays do not focus
clearly and the image one sees is blurry. Glasses or contact
lenses cannot sharpen vision if a cataract is present.
The only treatment for a cataract is to remove the lens and
implant an IOL. Intraocular lenses have many advantages.
Unlike contact lenses, which must be removed, cleaned, and
reinserted, the IOL remains in the eye after surgery.
An IOL may be placed either in front of or behind the iris.
Behind the iris is the most frequent placement site. They
can be hard plastic, soft plastic or soft silicone. Soft,
foldable lenses can be inserted through a small incision
which shortens recovery time following surgery.
Rapid evolution of IOL designs, materials, and implant
techniques have made them a safe and practical way to
restore normal vision after cataract surgery. |
|
|
|
|