Prelex Treatment
PRESBYOPIA AND PRELEX
How does presbyopia affect
vision?
If you are over 45 you
may be beginning to notice your vision isnt quite as good
as it once was. Your eye is designed to adjust so that it can focus
at distance and near, but as we age our lens becomes less flexible.
As a result it is less able to see near objects clearly so we require
reading glasses. Hyperopic (long-sighted) people, who have worn
glasses all their life for distance vision, will now require bifocals.
Myopes (short-sighted) in contrast often take their glasses off
to read. If this sounds familiar, then PRELEX may be the vision
correction for you.
Is it possible to correct
presbyopia using lasers. eg LASIK?
No. Laser vision correction
changes the curvature of the cornea. The cornea and the lens of
the eye both play a role in focusing light rays onto the retina.
As presbyopia is the deterioration in the lenss ability to
focus, surgery to the cornea will not correct the vision. Indeed,
people who have had successful laser vision correction to correct
their myopia or hyperopia will go on in later years to develop presbyopia.
However presbyopia can be corrected by lens surgery known as PRELEX.
What is PRELEX?
PRELEX is the name now
given to the surgical procedure to replace the natural lens of your
eye, which is no longer focusing correctly, with a multi-focal or
pseudo-accommodative intra-ocular lens implant (IOL). While the
application of the technology is new, the surgical techniques employed
have been proven successful over many years of use. Thats
because the procedure itself is similar to that used to treat cataract
patients. The only difference between a cataract patient and a PRELEX
patient is the clarity of the lens prior to surgery.
For more information
on prelex please visit the Grange Eye Consultants Website:-
http://www.grangeeyeconsultants.com/rls-presbyopia.htm
For further information
email enquiries@grangeeyeconsultants.com
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