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Updated: 6:29 PM May 30, 2008
New implantable contact lens procedure that doesn’t alter the cornea
The surgery doesn't alter the cornea as LASIK does. Implantable contact lenses are most effective in patients over age 21, and because collagen is formed naturally by the body, there's little risk of rejection.
Posted: 6:21 PM May 30, 2008Reporter: Maureen McFadden Email Address: maureen.mcfadden@wndu.com |
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Millions of Americans are nearsighted, and LASIK eye surgery seems like the answer they've been waiting for.
But not all patients are good candidates for the procedure.
For some of these patients, a new surgery is helping them see the light.
Special Ed. teacher Angela Naughton spends her summers in far-off lands, tutoring students around the globe.
As someone with extremely poor vision, Angela's nightmare was being stranded with no contacts or glasses.
"If anything went wrong there, I couldn't get another pair of glasses because mail took too long to get there," she explains.
She looked at LASIK surgery, but was consistently turned away by doctors who said Angela was a poor candidate for the procedure.
"We found that her corneas were too thin, which is common nowadays for a lot of people. In other words, there was not enough tissue to safely do the LASIK procedure," explained Dr. Steve H. Chang, an ophthalmologist.
He recommended implantable contact lenses, a procedure that implants a Collamer lens behind the patient's iris and restores 20/20 vision.
"We make a few very, very small incisions -- less than three millimeters -- where the white of the eye meets the colored part of the eye. We inject a substance in there to keep the space in the eye and then gently inject the lens in, which unfolds inside the eye,” explains Chang.
The surgery doesn't alter the cornea as LASIK does. Implantable contact lenses are most effective in patients over age 21, and because collagen is formed naturally by the body, there's little risk of rejection.
The best part -- if Angela’s prescription changes, the lens can be replaced, allowing Angela to stay focused on planning her exotic getaways.
Most implantable contact lens patients recover quickly and get back to regular activities the next day.
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