View clinical trials related to Cataract.
Filter by:The doctors participating in this study are looking to show improved vision with the HOYA AF-1 aspheric intraocular lens after cataract surgery. They will also study the use of Revital Vision (neuro-sensory testing) in providing the highest potential for improved vision.
This clinical study is a controlled, open, prospective, single-centre, multi-surgeon eye study to determine the safety and efficacy of intraocular cuts for femtosecond laser assisted lens frag-mentation to support phacoemulsification of the cataractous lens prior to IOL implantation. The cuts are applied by means of the FEMTEC femtosecond laser system with the CustomLens soft-ware module using a cylindrical and radial cut pattern with diameter and height dependent on anterior chamber depth, pupil diameter and ocular lens size. The hypothesis of the study is that by means of femtosecond laser assisted lens fragmentation the required ultrasound energy used for phacoemulsification can be reduced in a safe and effective way.
Intraocular Lens (IOL) formulas sometimes differ from expected. Using novel measurement methods before and after cataract surgery improved formulas are tried be developed.
This is an efficacy study of Bromfenac Ophthalmic Solution in cataract surgery.
Many patients with endothelial dysfunction also present with cataracts. It is therefore common practice to perform cataract extraction and intraocular lens (IOL) implantation during the same operation and immediately prior to Descemet's Stripping Automated Endothelial Keratoplasty (DSAEK), in order to minimize trips to the operating room and the associated risks of ocular surgery. However, the unique posterior corneal anatomy of the DSAEK recipient makes it difficult to predict pre-operatively the proper power of IOL to place, and some patients end up with a mismatched lens that requires spectacle correction. The current gold standard for IOL power calculation (A-Scan optical biometry) takes measurements of the anterior surface of the cornea and makes assumptions about the posterior surface that are violated by the unique hourglass shape of the donor DSAEK graft. New optical coherence tomography (OCT) technology provides us with the ability to measure curvature in both the anterior and posterior aspects of the cornea in order to generate an IOL calculation that has the potential to give more accurate results for our DSAEK patients. The investigators will be using the Optovue to perform corneal power analysis on patients who have already received DSAEK and cataract surgery, in order to compare the post-op Optovue power calculations to the pre-operative power calculations provided by the A-Scan. If the OCT is shown to provide accurate IOL power calculations, then some patients might be better served by a two-stage procedure where DSAEK is performed and then followed six months later by cataract surgery using the OCT to calculate IOL power.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the stability and efficacy of The AcrySof Toric intraocular lens in the bag in high myopic subjects.
The options for anesthesia in cataract surgery described are: general, regional or local. The local strategy, it may be by periocular blocking(subtenon, peribulbar or retrobulbar), subconjunctival or topical. The risks faced by subconjunctival, peribulbar or retrobulbar, have made subtenon and topical strategies the most used. Likewise, to improve the effectiveness of the topical strategy was added gel topical lidocaine and intracameral dose of lidocaine. Subtenon and topical anesthesia are two safe strategies and there were performed multiple studies showing that both are effective in controlling pain, but showing a slight superiority of subtenon. This difference does not appear to be clinically significant. In turn, the addition of gel and intracameral anesthesia, improved pain control. However, lack evidence to compare patient preference when using topical gel and intracameral anesthesia versus sub-Tenon anesthesia. Multiple advantages has the topical anesthesia. Besides being a safe strategy for the patient, offers a rapid visual recovery, no generates blepharoptosis or diplopia postoperatively, subconjunctival hemorrhage and chemosis. Because of this the investigators plan to conduct a study comparing the efficacy of gel topical and intracameral anesthesia versus subtenon anesthesia in cataract surgery with scleral incision, assessing the patient's preference Hypothesis: Topical administration of lidocaine in gel and intracameral anesthesia is a better strategy that subtenon anesthesia in cataract surgery
Investigate the intraocular pressure(pressure inside the eye) of patients who are treated with Lotemax after undergoing cataract surgery.
This is a study aimed at evaluating the effectiveness and impact of two intraocular irrigating solution (BSS ® versus glucose-bicarbonate-Ringer Lactate - GBRL) on the health of the cornea after cataract surgery by phacoemulsification.
The purpose of this study is to obtain data on the performance of the EC-3 lens at an interval of two years (and beyond) from subjects who were implanted. The primary aim of the study will be to evaluate the presence, if any, of PCO, lens glistening, and other anomalies in the subjects.