Cataracts can progress slowly and take years to impair your vision or advance quickly
and impair your vision in a matter of months especially in settings of trauma, surgery
and with certain medications. The development of cataracts are a natural part of the
aging process and is usually found in persons in their sixties and seventies, even
though younger persons can develop them as well.
Symptoms
- Clouded, blurred or dim vision, increasing difficulty with vision at night, sensitivity to light and glare, seeing “halos” around lights.
- Frequent changes in eyeglasses or contact lens prescriptions.
- Fading or yellowing of colors, double vision in a single eye. People often describe their vision as having a film over it.
- If you notice any changes in your vision or develop sudden vision changes such as double vision or blurriness, see your doctor right away.
Treatment
- Cataract Surgery is one of the world’s most frequently performed procedures and
has a very low rate of complications. Most cataract surgery is performed in a
hospital or surgical center.
- The most common form of cataract surgery uses a process called
phacoemulsification. With the use of an operating microscope, your surgeon will
make a very small incision in the surface of your eye in or near the cornea. A thin
ultrasound probe is then placed in the eye that causes ultrasonic vibrations to
dissolve the clouded lens. The resulting tiny fragmented pieces are then removed
out through the incision. Once removed, an artificial lens is placed into the same
thin capsular bag the cataract occupied. This intraocular lens helps focus the
light after your surgery, providing clear vision
- Either local anesthesia or topical anesthetic eye drops are used during surgery.
An anesthesiologist specialist monitors the patient for safety throughout the
surgery.
- The actual operation usually takes 20 minutes or less.