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EYE CARE PROTOCOL FOR PATIENTS IN ITU
EYE CARE PROTOCOL FOR PATIENTS IN ITU

... Conjunctivitis in this setting is usually bacterial and can be very infectious. Without due care it can be spread, as many of the bacteria in ITU are virulent, it is wise to take a swab of the eye discharge and send it for microbial culture. The discharge can be removed by bathing the eye lids with ...
Central Serous Retinopathy
Central Serous Retinopathy

... visual acuity in 6 months (average time to recover 3-4 months). Many patients will have some residual symptoms such as distortion, decreased color and contrast sensitivity, as well as visual difficulty at night. Despite an overall good prognosis, 40-50% of patients experience one or more recurrences ...
Strabismus and Refractive Surgery
Strabismus and Refractive Surgery

... Indications 1 Hutchinson 2012 ...
pdf - Choosing Wisely
pdf - Choosing Wisely

... Low “farsightedness” is a normal finding in children. Children can easily focus to see at near, with their large accommodative reserve. If the reading glasses prescription is low (less than +2.00 diopters), their innate ability to focus can be used to see clearly at both distance and near. If the ey ...
Medical decision-making in optometric practice
Medical decision-making in optometric practice

... The lower punctum is inspected microscopically A lacrimal probe is inserted into the lacrimal punctum The punctal orifice is gradually dilated using probes of increasing size ...
iris and ciliary body tumors
iris and ciliary body tumors

... Dr. Finger has made iris biopsy safer for patients with iris tumors. In the past, this either involved using a sharp edged needle or opening the eye to grasp and snip a sample for pathology. In 2005, Finger and colleagues published their initial experience using a 25-gauge aspiration cutter, inserte ...
Epiretinal Membranes (ERMs), also commonly
Epiretinal Membranes (ERMs), also commonly

... Retina Image Bank, 2012; Image 181. (PVD), where the vitreous gel that ©American Society of Retina Specialists fills the eye separates from the retina, causing micro-tears and symptoms of floaters and flashes. If there is no specific cause apart from the PVD, the ERM is called idiopathic (of unknown ...
Epiretinal Membranes (ERMs), also commonly
Epiretinal Membranes (ERMs), also commonly

... Retina Image Bank, 2012; Image 181. (PVD), where the vitreous gel that ©American Society of Retina Specialists fills the eye separates from the retina, causing micro-tears and symptoms of floaters and flashes. If there is no specific cause apart from the PVD, the ERM is called idiopathic (of unknown ...
Consent For Lasikprk Retreatment
Consent For Lasikprk Retreatment

... surgery, and treatment may or may not fully restore vision. 4. I understand that there is an increased risk of eye irritation related to drying of the corneal surface following surgery. These symptoms may be temporary or, on rare occasions, permanent and may require frequent application of artificia ...
Eye injuries in the extreme environment ultra
Eye injuries in the extreme environment ultra

... Multi-day outdoor events and ultra-marathons across the world are rapidly increasing in popularity, and often take in a wide range of terrain and weather conditions. While musculoskeletal injuries are a recognised cause of morbidity in athletes, there appears to be little in the literature regarding ...
the eye - Mrothery.co.uk
the eye - Mrothery.co.uk

... Aqueous humour - between cornea and lens - colourless watery fluid. Vitreous humour - between lens and retina - clear gelatinous mucoprotein. Accommodation = The process by which light is focused onto the retina. Cornea reflects light towards the lens. The lens focusing the light on to the retina. N ...
Eye Safety - The Virginia Retina Center
Eye Safety - The Virginia Retina Center

... DO NOT substitute ordinary streetwear glasses or contact lenses for safety eyewear. Ordinary glasses may break on impact, often leading to severe eye injury, and contact lenses provide no protection whatsoever against eye ...
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma

... causes a pressure-induced ischemic paralysis of the iris. At this time, pilocarpine would be ineffective. During the second evaluation, the initial agents have decreased the elevated IOP and hopefully have reduced the ischemic paralysis so pilocarpine becomes beneficial in ...
Medical design template
Medical design template

... Otoscopic Examination of the EAC and TM • Straighten the ear canal • Adults- pull superior and posterior • Children– pull posterior and maybe inferior ...
OCULAR SURGERY NEWS 5/1/03
OCULAR SURGERY NEWS 5/1/03

... astigmatism, which allows us to suppose that tension of eye tissues is one of the mechanisms that underlies the formation of myopic astigmatism.” Different factors may contribute to generate this tension: the distribution of collagen fibers in cornea; the strength, elasticity or rigidity of the tiss ...
The Red and Painful Eye
The Red and Painful Eye

... FLUORESCEIN: otherwise known as resorscinophthalein, is a bright yellow-orange dye. It does not stain a normal cornea or conjunctiva but picks up any minor irregularity, abrasion, ulcer, et cetera. Its also quite a good medium for Pseudomonas; so only use the single-use disposable packs. MINIMS EYE ...
corneal crosslinking research study
corneal crosslinking research study

... causing visual distortion. This condition is called keratoconus (cone shaped cornea). The shape of the cornea changes from a smooth, round surface to a cone shape (see drawings to the right). With keratoconus, your vision changes in two ways. First, the surface of the cornea becomes slightly wavy, w ...
Pterygium/Pingueculum
Pterygium/Pingueculum

... UV sun, dust, wind… repeated exposure Chronic irritation – contact lenses, welding Higher prevalence with proximity to the equator ...
Lab 2 The Microscope
Lab 2 The Microscope

... 1. Install the 10x ocular containing the ocular micrometer disc in the microscope. 2. Place the calibrated stage micrometer slide on the stage and focus on the scale. 3. Adjust the field so that the zero line of the ocular disc scale is exactly superimposed upon the zero line of the stage micrometer ...
Nd:YAP ophthalmological
Nd:YAP ophthalmological

... different membranes, for example for a posterior capsulotomy.1–6 For that purpose Nd:YAG laser generating plasma breakdown (laser spark) by nanosecond or picosecond pulses is used. In our previous papers we reported about application of both types of these pulses and success of treatments was shown. ...
Option – Communication Humans, and other animals, are able to
Option – Communication Humans, and other animals, are able to

... 2) They convert this light energy into electrochemical energy, generating a nerve impulse 3) They transmit this nerve impulse towards the bipolar cells of the retina. The signals are then transmitted to the Ganglion cells which, at the distal end of the cells, are extended and go on to form the fibr ...
Leukocoria and the red reflex test
Leukocoria and the red reflex test

... migrans infection. Human infection takes place after a person consumes earth contaminated with parasite eggs or food contaminated with dog feces. In the human intestine, the egg gives rise to the nematode larva, which penetrates the wall of the intestine. There is systemic infestation of various org ...
Red Eyes at Halloween
Red Eyes at Halloween

... course of a broad‐spectrum topical antibiotic is usually effective, the most convenient or  least expensive option can be selected. A common first choice drop is Polytrim (polymyxin B  and Trimethoprim sulfate) as it has broad coverage, comes in a large bottle, and has  minimal stinging.  A typical  ...
svnesbitt@gmail.com Prescribing Information
svnesbitt@gmail.com Prescribing Information

... LUMIGAN® (bimatoprost ophthalmic solution) 0.01% is indicated for the reduction of elevated intraocular pressure in patients with open angle glaucoma or ocular hypertension. ...
Eye - My Illinois State - Illinois State University
Eye - My Illinois State - Illinois State University

...  Diagnosis suggested by pain, photophobia, redness, and ciliary flush  Anterior uveitis = iritis  With posterior uveitis, inflammation is usually confined to the posterior choroid, which quickly spreads to the sensory retina, resulting in potential destruction of vision.  REFER Iritis (anterior ...
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Cataract surgery



Cataract surgery is the removal of the natural lens of the eye (also called ""crystalline lens"") that has developed an opacification, which is referred to as a cataract. Metabolic changes of the crystalline lens fibers over time lead to the development of the cataract and loss of transparency, causing impairment or loss of vision. Many patients' first symptoms are strong glare from lights and small light sources at night, along with reduced acuity at low light levels. During cataract surgery, a patient's cloudy natural cataract lens is removed and replaced with a synthetic lens to restore the lens's transparency.Following surgical removal of the natural lens, an artificial intraocular lens implant is inserted (eye surgeons say that the lens is ""implanted""). Cataract surgery is generally performed by an ophthalmologist (eye surgeon) in an ambulatory (rather than inpatient) setting, in a surgical center or hospital, using local anesthesia (either topical, peribulbar, or retrobulbar), usually causing little or no discomfort to the patient. Well over 90% of operations are successful in restoring useful vision, with a low complication rate. Day care, high volume, minimally invasive, small incision phacoemulsification with quick post-op recovery has become the standard of care in cataract surgery all over the world.
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