| Cataract Surgery Information | ||
GULFCOAST EYE CARE CENTER Patient Information Sheet: Cataract Surgery And/Or Implantation of an Intraocular Lens This information is given to you so that you can prepare for the discussion with your eye surgeon. This document will help you understand the risks of cataract surgery. It will also help you decide the type of replacement lens you want. Eyeglasses or contact lenses are usually required for best vision after cataract surgery WHAT IS A CATARACT? The lens in the eye can become cloudy and hard, a condition known as a cataract. HOW WILL REMOVING THE CATARACT AFFECT MY VISION? The goal of cataract surgery is to correct the decreased vision that was caused by the cataract. During the surgery, the ophthalmologist (eye surgeon) removes the cataract and puts in a new artificial lens called an intraocular lens or IOL. The IOL will be left in the eye permanently. Cataract surgery will not correct other causes of decreased vision, such as glaucoma, diabetes, or age-related macular degeneration. Most people still need to wear glasses or contact lens after cataract surgery for either near and/or distance vision and astigmatism. EXAMINATIONS PRIOR TO SURGERY If you agree to have the surgery, you will undergo a complete eye examination by your If you wear contact lenses, you must leave them out of your eyes for a period of time before your preoperative eye examination and before your surgery. This is done because the contact lens rests on the cornea and distorts its shape, which can effect the accuracy of the doctor's measurements of the IOL power. When you stop wearing your contact lenses, the corneas can return to their natural shape. Stop wearing both soft and rigid (including gas permeable and standard hard) contacts for at least three weeks. If you wear rigid contacts, your vision will usually vary for a while as your corneas change shape. Although the cornea usually returns to its natural state within three weeks, this process may take longer, and you will need to remain contact lens free until your vision and cornea stabilize. MORE INFORMATION ABOUT MEASURING YOUR IOL While the method used to calculate the power of the IOL is very accurate in most patients, the final result may be different from what you and your surgeon planned. As the eye heals, the IOL can shift very slightly toward the front or the back of the eye. The amount of this shift is not the same in everyone, and it may cause different vision than predicted. If the eye's visual power after surgery is considerably different than what was planned, surgical replacement of the IOL might be considered. It is usually possible to replace the IOL and improve the situation. Patients who are highly nearsighted or highly farsighted have the greatest risk of differences between planned and actual outcomes. Patients who have had LASIK or other refractive surgeries are difficult to measure precisely. PRESBYOPIA AND ALTERNATIVES FOR NEAR VISION AFTER SURGERY Patients who have cataracts have, or will eventually develop presbyopia, which is a condition caused by aging that develops when your eye loses its ability to shift from distance to near vision. Presbyopia is the reason that reading glasses become necessary, typically after age 40, even for people who have excellent distance and near vision without glasses. Presbyopic individuals require bifocals or separate (different prescription) reading glasses in order to see clearly at close range. There are several options available to you to achieve distance and near vision after cataract surgery. This is probably the most important decision you need to make about your cataract surgery, so please take the time to review your options and ask questions. GLASSES. You can choose to have a monofocal (single focus) IOL implanted for distance vision and wear separate reading glasses, or have the IOL implanted for near vision and wear separate glasses for distance. MONOVISION. The ophthalmologist could implant IOLs with two different powers, MULTIFOCAL IOL. The ophthalmologist could implant a "multifocal" IOL. This is a newer, "deluxe" type of IOL that provides distance vision AND restores some or all of MORE INFORMATION ABOUT MONOVISION In order to have good depth perception, your eyes need to be corrected for any refractive problems such as nearsightedness or farsightedness, and "balanced" for distance. Eye care professionals refer to this as binocular vision. Monovision or "blended" vision can impair depth perception to some extent, because the eyes are not focused together at the same distance. It is important to choose which eye you will use for distance vision. Eye surgeons generally believe that one eye is the dominant one, preferred for viewing. This is similar to people being right-or left-handed. Several tests can be performed to determine which eye is dominant in a"particular person. With monovision, the dominant eye is usually corrected for distance, and the non-dominant eye corrected for near. However, a very small percentage of persons may be codominant INFORMATION ABOUT TREATING ASTIGMATISM Patients with nearsightedness and farsightedness often also have astigmatism. An astigmatism is caused by an irregularly shaped cornea; instead of being round like a basketball, the cornea is shaped like a football. This change in shape can make your vision blurry. There are several treatment options for astigmatism: 1) you can have an IOL for near or distance vision and continue to wear glasses or contact lens for the astigmatism; 2) you can have a toric IOL placed in your eye, 3) you can have refractive surgery called LASIK or PRK, or 4) your surgeon can perform a procedure before, during, or after cataract surgery called a limbal relaxing incision. A limbal relaxing incision (LRI) is a small cut or incision the ophthalmologist makes into your cornea to make its shape rounder. More than one incision may be required. ANESTHESIA, PROCEDURE, AND POSTOPERATIVE CARE The ophthalmologist or the anesthesiologist/nurse anesthetist will make your eye numb with either drops or an injection (local anesthesia). You may also undergo light sedation administered by an anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist, or elect to have the surgery with only local anesthesia. There are risks associated with anesthesia and sedation. These include injury to the eye, heart and breathing problems, and in very rare cases, death. An incision, or opening, is then made in the eye. This is at times self-sealing but it may require closure with very fine stitches (sutures) which will be removed after surger. The natural lens in your eye will then be removed. There are several ways to remove the lens; the most common technique is called phacoemulsification, which uses a vibrating probe to break the lens up into small pieces. These pieces are gently suctioned out of your eye through a small, hollow tube inserted through a small incision into your eye. After your natural lens is removed, the IOL is placed inside your eye. In rare cases, it may not be possible to implant the IOL you have chosen, or any IOL at all. Your eye will be examined the day after surgery by your surgeon and then at intervals determined by your surgeon. During the immediate recovery period, you will place drops in your eyes for about 4 weeks, depending on your individual rate of healing. If you have chosen monovision or a multifocal IOL to reduce your dependency on glasses or contacts, they may still be required either for further improvement in your distance vision, reading vision, or both. You should be able to resume your normal activities within 2 or 3 days, and your eye will usually be stable within 3 to 6 weeks, at which time glasses or contact lenses could be prescribed. RISKS OF CATARACT SURGERY All operations and procedures are risky and can result in unsuccessful results, complications, injury, or even death, from both known and unknown causes. The major risks of cataract surgery with implantation of an IOL include, but are not limited to: 1. Mild discomfort. Cataract surgery is usually quite comfortable. Mild discomfort for 2. Complications of removing the natural lens may include bleeding (hemorrhage); rupture of the capsule that supports the IOL; perforation of the eye; clouding of the normally clear outer layer of the eye called the cornea (a condition known as corneal edema), which can be corrected with a corneal transplant; swelling in the central area of the retina (called cystoid macular edema), which usually improves with time; retained pieces of lens in the eye, which may need to be removed surgically; infection; detachment of the retina, which is definitely an increased risk for highly nearsighted patients, but which can usually be repaired; uncomfortable or painful eye; droopy eyelid; increased astigmatism; glaucoma; and double vision. These and other complications may occur whether or not an IOL is implanted and may result in poor vision, total loss of vision, or even loss of the eye in rare situations. Additional surgery may be required to treat these complications. The cost for this additional surgery is not included in the price you pay for the cataract surgery. 3. Complications associated with the IOL may include increased night glare and/or halos,double or ghost images, and dislocation of the IOL. Multifocal lOLs may increase the likelihood of these problems, soyou should think carefully about how these problems might effect your job, your hobbies, and your daily life. In some instances, corrective lenses or surgical replacement of the IOL may be necessary for adequate visual function following cataract surgery. 4. Complications associated with limbal relaxing incisions include damage to the cornea, infection, and fluctuating vision while the incision heals. They can also lead to under and over-correction; if this occurs, another procedure and/or glasses or contact lenses may be required. 5. Complications'associated with local anesthesia injections around the eve include a hole (perforation) of the eye, injury to the optic nerve, interference with the circulation of the retina, droopy eyelid, breathing problems, low blood pressure (hypotension), heart (cardiac) problems, and in rare situations, brain damage or death. 6. If a monofocal (single focus) IOl is implanted. either distance or reading glasses or 8. Multifocal (multiple focus) IOls may reduce dependency on glasses but might also 9. If complications occur at the time of surgery, the doctor may decide not to implant an 10. Other factors may affect the visual outcome of cataract surgery, including other eye 11.Your doctor will use special equipment and computer formulas to select the best IOL 12. Regardless of the IOL chosen you may need laser surgery (YAG capsulotomy) to correct clouding of vision. At some future time, the IOL implanted in your eye may have to be repositioned, removed surgically, or exchanged for another IOL. 13. lf your ophthalmologist has informed you that you have a high degree of farsightedness (hyperopia >5.0 diopters) and/or that the axial length of your eye is short (, 18.0mm), your risk for a complication known as nanophthalmic choroidal effusion is increased. This complication could result in difficulties completing the surgery and implanting a lens, or even loss of the eye. 14. lf your ophthalmologist has informed you that you have a high degree of nearsightedness (myopia> -7.0 diopters) and/or that the axial length of your eye is long (> 25.00 mm), your risk for a complication called a retinal detachment is increased. Retinal detachments can usually be repaired but may lead to vision loss or blindness. 15.Since only one eye will undergo surgery at a time, you may experience a period of imbalance between the two eyes (anisometropia). This usually cannot be corrected with eyeglasses because of the marked difference in the prescriptions, so you will either temporarily have to wear a contact lens in the non-operated eye or will function with only one clear eye for distance vision. In the absence of complications, surgery in the second eye can usually be accomplished within 2 to 4 weeks, once the first eye has stabilized. 16.There is no guarantee that cataract surgery will improve your vision. As a result of the surgery and/or anesthesia, it is possible that your vision could be made worse. In some cases, complications may occur weeks, months or even years later. These and other complications may result in poor vision, total loss of vision, or even loss of the eye in rare situations. You may need additional treatment or surgery to treat these complications. This additional treatment is not included in the fee for this procedure.
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