The Accommodating Intraocular Lens
Most patients over the age of 45 who are
nearsighted or
farsighted are also
presbyopic. Presbyopia is a condition
that prevents the eye's natural
lens from
changing shape, disallowing one to see
clearly for both distance and near vision.
Losing this ability is called 'loss of
accommodation.' In order to restore
accommodation, the accommodating IOL is
designed to provide a continuous range of
vision for distance, intermediate, near, and
everything in-between. This IOL is
engineered with a hinge - designed to allow
the optic, the part of the IOL through which
you see, to move back and forth, which
changes the focus from near to far.
Millions of eyes have received IOL implants
when undergoing cataract surgery, using the
same highly successful surgical techniques
used to implant the AIOL. Performed as an
outpatient procedure, the natural lens is
removed using ultrasonic vibrations through
a very small micro-incision and replaced
through that same incision with the AIOL.
You will remain comfortable as the eye is
completely anesthetized. Many patients
report improvement in their distance vision
almost immediately, and your intermediate
vision will improve in a week or two. The
more you try to read without reading
glasses, the quicker you will be able to
read without them. One eye is done at a
time, and the second eye is usually done in
a week or two.
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