Cataracts
A cataract is a “clouding” of the natural crystalline lens inside your eye. It is similar to a steamed-up or blurred focusing lens inside a camera. There are many causes of cataract development, including inherited diseases and diabetes. Most are thought to be caused by sunlight exposure over many years, but cataracts can occur at any age, even in newborn babies.
When the crystalline lens creates difficulty with visual tasks, is causing glaucoma, or is otherwise endangering the eye, we remove it using a surgical procedure called phacoemulsification with implantation. Despite some popular claims and beliefs, cataracts cannot be magically “beamed out” of the eye with the laser.
Phacoemulsification with implantation is the most advanced technique for the removal of cataracts. Your surgeon creates a tiny incision and removes the cataract by using an ultrasonic tip vibrating at 40,000+ times per second.
Your surgeon then positions a permanent implant, selected especially for you, which focuses light similarly to the way that your natural crystalline lens did before it developed into a cataract. In many cases, the implant focuses the light BETTER than your natural crystalline lens. The implant also has an ultraviolet filter to protect the retina in the back of the eye from sunlight injury.
The incision self seals and requires no sutures. Topical anesthesia, or drops alone, makes the standard painful injections unnecessary. The entire procedure requires less than 10 minutes and the recovery period is about three weeks.
Cataract surgery, the most successful surgical procedure in all of modern medicine, is highly effective in the safe restoration of vision.


