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Presbyopia clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Presbyopia.

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NCT ID: NCT03173664 Not yet recruiting - Presbyopia Clinical Trials

Post-Approval Study With the KAMRA Inlay

Start date: July 31, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

KAMRA inlay, to be unilaterally implanted into the cornea of a subject's non-dominant eye. The inlay is to be inserted into a stromal pocket created with a surgical femtosecond laser.

NCT ID: NCT02112968 Not yet recruiting - Myopia Clinical Trials

A Prospective Safety and Effectiveness Study of a New High Repetition Rate Excimer Laser Using LASIK for the Correction of Ammetropia and Presbyopia

Start date: December 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This clinical study has been planned to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of common treatment algorithms using 500 Hz laser repetition rate for the correction of Ammetropia and Presbyopia

NCT ID: NCT01088282 Not yet recruiting - Presbyopia Clinical Trials

Visual and Economic Profits of ReSTOR® Multifocal Intraocular Lenses (IOL) on Public Health Patients in Spain

Start date: March 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Surgical correction of presbyopia is possible via the implantation of multifocal intraocular lenses after removal of the crystalline lens. The cost of these implants is approximately 6 times higher than the conventional monofocal implants routinely used in all crystalline surgery for correction of the resulting ametropia. Spectacles for correcting presbyopia, which are necessary after the insertion of monofocal implants, may also have a significant cost. The proposed trial will involve two randomized groups of patients in need of crystalline/cataract surgery, with monofocal or multifocal lens implants (the same type of lens in both eyes) leaving them emmetropic for distant vision. The objective is to corroborate with blind-evaluation the effectiveness of multifocal lens implants in obviating the need for glasses to correct presbyopia, to evaluate the benefits of this type of implant, both in global economic terms (adding the cost of the implants to that of corrective glasses where necessary) and in terms of the improved quality of life of the patients, and to confirm the absence of adverse effects. Findings will be subjected to a statistical quantification.