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Cataract surgery



 
 
Cataract surgery is the removal of the lens
Lens (anatomy)

The lens is a transparent, Lens_#Types_of_lenses structure in the eye that, along with the cornea, helps to refract light to be Focus on the retina....
 of the eye
Eye

Eyes are Organ that detect light, and send signals along the optic nerve to the visual system and other areas of the brain. Complex optical systems with resolving power have come in ten fundamentally different forms, and 96% of animal species possess a complex optical system....
 (also called "crystalline") that has developed an opacification, which is referred to as a cataract
Cataract

A cataract is a clouding that develops in the lens of the eye or in its envelope, varying in degree from slight to complete Opacity and obstructing the passage of light....
. Metabolic changes of the crystalline lens fibers over the time lead to the development of the cataract and loss of transparency, causing impairment or loss of vision
Vision

Vision or Visions may refer to:* visual perception, eyesight* vision , inspirational experiences* hallucination, vivid conscious perception in the absence of a stimulus....
.






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Cataract in Human Eye
Cataract surgery is the removal of the lens
Lens (anatomy)

The lens is a transparent, Lens_#Types_of_lenses structure in the eye that, along with the cornea, helps to refract light to be Focus on the retina....
 of the eye
Eye

Eyes are Organ that detect light, and send signals along the optic nerve to the visual system and other areas of the brain. Complex optical systems with resolving power have come in ten fundamentally different forms, and 96% of animal species possess a complex optical system....
 (also called "crystalline") that has developed an opacification, which is referred to as a cataract
Cataract

A cataract is a clouding that develops in the lens of the eye or in its envelope, varying in degree from slight to complete Opacity and obstructing the passage of light....
. Metabolic changes of the crystalline lens fibers over the time lead to the development of the cataract and loss of transparency, causing impairment or loss of vision
Vision

Vision or Visions may refer to:* visual perception, eyesight* vision , inspirational experiences* hallucination, vivid conscious perception in the absence of a stimulus....
. During cataract surgery, a patient's aging and cloudy natural lens is removed and replaced with a synthetic lens to restore the lens's transparency.

Following surgical removal of the natural lens, an artificial intraocular lens
Intraocular lens

An intraocular lens is an implanted lens in the eye, usually replacing the existing lens because it has been clouded over by a cataract, or as a form of refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power....
 implant is inserted (eye surgeons say that the lens is "implanted"). Cataract surgery is generally performed by an ophthalmologist
Ophthalmology

Ophthalmology is the branch of medicine which deals with the Eye diseases and Eye surgery of the visual pathways, including the eye, brain, and areas surrounding the eye, such as the lacrimal system and eyelids....
 (eye surgeon) in an ambulatory (rather than inpatient) setting, in a surgical center or hospital, using local anesthesia (either topical, peribulbar, or retrobulbar), usually causing little or no discomfort to the patient. Well over 90% of operations are successful in restoring useful vision, with a low complication rate. Day care, high volume, minimally invasive, small incision phacoemulsification with quick post-op recovery has become the standard of care in cataract surgery all over the world.

Types

Currently, the two main types of cataract surgery extraction performed by the ophthalmologists are phacoemulsification (phaco) and conventional extracapsular cataract extraction (ECCE). In both types of surgery an Intraocular lens
Intraocular lens

An intraocular lens is an implanted lens in the eye, usually replacing the existing lens because it has been clouded over by a cataract, or as a form of refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power....
 is usually inserted. Foldable lenses are generally used when phaco is performed while non-foldable lenses are placed following ECCE. The small incision size used in phacoemulsification often allows "sutureless" wound closure. ECCE usually require stitching.

Cataract extraction using intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE) has been superseded by phaco & ECCE, and is only rarely performed.

We now know that the lens can spontaneously dislocate into the vitreous cavity in certain diseases including Marfan's Syndrome and Homocystinuria. The dislocations of the crystalline into the vitreous cavity may require surgical intervention to prevent the development of intra-ocular inflammation and increase of the intra-ocular pressure.

Until recently, the only option for cataract surgery was a fixed-focus lens - typically designed for faraway distances - which left the patients needing bifocals or reading glasses to see up close. However, advances in cataract surgery has led to new types of implantable lenses. Unlike the standard single-power lenses doctors have been implanting for 30 years, the newer multifocal introcular lenses and accommodating lenses allow patients to see near, far, and in between "and even shed their glasses". These advances are allowing once legally blind people to "see nearly perfectly without any help."

Multifocal lenses work by having more than one focal point, much like bifocal or trifocal eyeglasses. Bausch & Lomb's accommodating lenses are on struts, and when inserted into the lens capsule the eye's focusing muscles move the lens back and forth, allowing the patient's eye to focus like a young person's eye.

Types of surgery

Cataract Surgery


Extracapsular cataract extraction involves the removal of almost the entire natural lens while the elastic lens capsule (posterior capsule) is left intact to allow implantation of an intraocular lens. There are two main types of cataract surgery:

  • Phacoemulsification
    Phacoemulsification

    Phacoemulsification refers to modern cataract surgery in which the eye's internal lens is emulsified with an ultrasound handpiece, and aspirated from the eye....
     (Phaco) is the preferred method in most cases. It involves the use of a machine with an ultrasonic handpiece equipped with a titanium or steel tip. The tip vibrates at ultrasonic frequency (40,000 Hz) and the lens material is emulsified. A second fine instrument (sometimes called a cracker or chopper) may be used from a side port to facilitate cracking or chopping of the nucleus into smaller pieces. Fragmentation into smaller pieces makes emulsification easier, as well as the aspiration of cortical material (soft part of the lens around the nucleus). After phacoemulsification of the lens nucleus and cortical material is completed, a dual irrigation-aspiration (I-A) probe or a bimanual I-A system is used to aspirate out the remaining peripheral cortical material.


  • Conventional extracapsular cataract extraction (ECCE): It involves manual expression of the lens through a large (usually 10-12 mm) incision made in the cornea
    Cornea

    The cornea is the transparency front part of the eye that covers the Iris , pupil, and anterior chamber. Together with the cilliary muscles, the cornea reflects light, and as a result helps the eye to dilate, accounting for approximately two-thirds of the eye's total optical power....
     or sclera
    Sclera

    The sclera, also known as the white of the eye, is the opaque , fibrous, protective, outer layer of the eye containing collagen and elastic fibers....
    . Although it requires a larger incision and the use of stitches, the conventional method may be indicated for patients with very hard cataracts or other situations in which phacoemulsification is problematic. Microincision cataract surgery involves a technique by which a cataract can be reached through an incision of 1.5 millimeters or less.


  • Intra-capsular extraction is an out-dated method of cataract surgery, rarely performed today. See description in the next section.


  • Intraocular lens
    Intraocular lens

    An intraocular lens is an implanted lens in the eye, usually replacing the existing lens because it has been clouded over by a cataract, or as a form of refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power....
     implantation
    : After the removal of the cataract, an intraocular lens
    Intraocular lens

    An intraocular lens is an implanted lens in the eye, usually replacing the existing lens because it has been clouded over by a cataract, or as a form of refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power....
     (IOL) is usually implanted into the eye, either through a small incision (1.8 mm to 2.8 mm) using a foldable IOL, or through an enlarged incision, using a PMMA (polymethylmethacrylate) lens. The foldable IOL, made of silicone
    Silicone

    Silicones are largely inert, man-made compounds with a wide variety of forms and uses. Typically heat-resistant, nonstick, and rubberlike, they are commonly used in cookware, medicine, sealants, adhesives, lubricants, and insulation....
     or acrylic
    Acryl group

    In organic chemistry, the acryloyl group is the functional group with structure Hydrogen2Carbon=CH?C?; it is the acyl group derived from acrylic acid....
     material of appropriate power is folded either using a holder/folder, or a proprietary insertion device provided along with the IOL. The lens implanted is inserted through the incision into the capsular bag within the posterior chamber (in-the-bag implantation). Sometimes, a sulcus implantation (in front or on top of the capsular bag but behind the iris) may be required because of posterior capsular tears or because of zonulodialysis. Implantation of posterior-chamber IOL (PC-IOL) in patients below 1 to 2 years of age is relatively contraindicated due to rapid ocular growth at this age and the excessive amount of inflammation, which may be very difficult to control. Optical correction in these patients without intraocular lens aphakic is usually managed with either special contact lenses or glasses. Secondary implantation of IOL (placement of a lens implant as a second operation) may be considered after 2 years of age. New designs of multi-focal intra-ocular lens are now available. These lenses allow focusing of rays from distant as well as near objects, working much like bifocal or trifocal eyeglasses. Pre-operative patient selection and good counselling is extremely important to avoid unrealistic expectations and post-operative patient dissatisfaction. Acceptability for these lenses has become better and studies have shown good results in selected patients. Brands in the market include: Restore (R), Rezoom (R) and Technis MF (R).


In addition, there is an accommodating lens that was approved by the US FDA in 2003 and made by Eyeonics, now Bausch & Lomb. The Crystalens (R) is on struts and is implanted in the eye's lens capsule, and its design allows the lens' focusing muscles to move it back and forth, giving the patient natural focusing ability.

Intracapsular cataract extraction

Intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE) involves the removal of the lens and the surrounding lens capsule in one piece. The lens is then replaced with an artificial plastic
Plastic

Plastic is the general common term for a wide range of synthetic or semisynthetic organic chemistry solid materials suitable for the manufacture of industrial products....
 lens (an intraocular lens
Intraocular lens

An intraocular lens is an implanted lens in the eye, usually replacing the existing lens because it has been clouded over by a cataract, or as a form of refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power....
 implant) of appropriate power which remains permanently in the eye. The procedure has a relatively high rate of complications due to the large incision required and pressure placed on the vitreous body, thus is rarely performed in countries where operating microscopes and high-technology equipment are readily available. Cryoextraction
Cryoextraction (medicine)

In ophthalmology, cryoextraction is a form of intracapsular cataract extraction in which a cryoextractor, a special type of cryosurgery, is used to freeze the crystalline lens and pull it intact from the eye....
 is a form of ICCE that freezes the lens with a cryogenic substance such as liquid nitrogen
Liquid nitrogen

Liquid nitrogen is a liquefied atmospheric gas produced industrially in large quantities by fractional distillation of liquid air. It is pure nitrogen in a liquid state at very low temperature....
. In this technique, the cataract is extracted through use of a cryoextractor — a c ryoprobe whose refrigerated tip adheres to and freezes tissue of the lens, permitting its removal. Although it is now used primarily for the removal of subluxated lenses, it was the favored form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s.

Preoperative evaluation

An eye examination
Eye examination

An eye examination is a battery of tests performed by an optometrist or ophthalmologist assessing Visual perception and ability to Focus on and discern objects, as well as other tests and examinations pertaining to the eyes....
 or pre-operative evaluation by an eye surgeon is necessary to confirm the presence of a cataract and to determine if the patient is a suitable candidate for surgery. The patient must fulfill certain requirements such as:

  • The degree of reduction of vision due, at least in large part, to the cataract should be evaluated. While the existence of other sight-threatening diseases, such as age-related macular degeneration or glaucoma
    Glaucoma

    Glaucoma is a group of diseases of the optic nerve involving loss of ganglion cell in a characteristic pattern of optic atrophy. Raised intraocular pressure is a significant risk factor for developing glaucoma ....
    , does not preclude cataract surgery, less improvement may be expected than in their absence.
  • The eyes should have a normal pressure, or any pre-existing glaucoma
    Glaucoma

    Glaucoma is a group of diseases of the optic nerve involving loss of ganglion cell in a characteristic pattern of optic atrophy. Raised intraocular pressure is a significant risk factor for developing glaucoma ....
     should be adequately controlled on medications. In cases of uncontrolled glaucoma, a combined cataract-glaucoma procedure (Phaco-trabeculectomy
    Trabeculectomy

    Trabeculectomy is a surgical procedure used in the treatment of glaucoma to relieve intraocular pressure by removing part of the eye's trabecular meshwork and adjacent structures....
    ) can be planned and performed.
  • The pupil
    Pupil

    The pupil is the sphere that is located in the center of the Iris of the eye and that controls the amount of light that enters the eye. It appears black because most of the light entering the pupil is absorbed by the biological tissue inside the eye....
     should be adequately dilated using eyedrops; if pharmacologic pupil dilation is inadequate, procedures for mechanical pupillary dilatation may be needed during the surgery.
  • The patients with retinal detachment may be scheduled for a combined vitreo-retinal procedure, along with PC-IOL implantation.
  • In addition, it has recently been shown that patients taking tamsulosin
    Tamsulosin

    Tamsulosin is an alpha-1a receptor-selective alpha blocker used in the symptomatic treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia . Tamsulosin was developed by Yamanouchi Pharmaceuticals and is marketed by various companies under licence, including Boehringer-Ingelheim and CSL Limited....
     (Flomax), a common drug for enlarged prostate, are prone to developing a surgical complication
    Complication (medicine)

    Complication, in medicine, is an unfavorable evolution of a disease, a health condition or a medical treatment. The disease can become worse in its severity or show a higher number of signs, symptoms or new pathology changes, become widespread throughout the body or affect other organ systems....
     known as floppy iris syndrome, which must be correctly managed to avoid the complication posterior capsule rupture; however, prospective studies have shown that the risk is greatly reduced if the surgeon is informed of the patient's history with the drug beforehand, and has appropriate alternative techniques prepared. .


Operation procedures

The surgical procedure in phacoemulsification for removal of cataract involves a number of steps. Each step must be carefully and skillfully performed in order to achieve the desired result. The steps may be described as follows:
  1. Anaesthesia,
  2. Exposure of the eyeball using a lid speculum,
  3. Entry into the eye through a minimal incision (corneal or scleral)
  4. Viscoelastic injection to stabilize the anterior chamber and to help maintain the eye pressurization
  5. Capsulorhexis
  6. Hydrodissection pie
  7. Hydro-delineation
  8. Ultrasonic destruction or emulsification of the cataract after nuclear cracking or chopping (if needed), cortical aspiration of the remanescent lens, capsular polishing (if needed)
  9. Implantation of the artificial IOL
  10. Entration of IOL (usually foldable)
  11. Viscoelastic removal
  12. Wound sealing / hydration (if needed).
The pupil is dilated using drops (if the IOL is to be placed behind the iris) to help better visualise the cataract. Pupil constricting drops are reserved for secondary implantation of the IOL in front of the iris (if the cataract has already been removed without primary IOL implantation). Anesthesia
Anesthesia

Anesthesia, or anaesthesia , has traditionally meant the condition of having sensation blocked or temporarily taken away. This allows patients to undergo surgery and other procedures without the distress and pain they would otherwise experience....
 may be placed topically (eyedrops) or via injection next to (peribulbar) or behind (retrobulbar) the eye. Oral or intravenous sedation may also be used to reduce anxiety. General anesthesia is rarely necessary, but may be employed for children and adults with particular medical or psychiatric issues. The operation may occur on a stretcher or a reclining examination chair. The eyelids and surrounding skin will be swabbed with disinfectant. The face is covered with a cloth or sheet, with an opening for the operative eye. The eyelid is held open with a speculum
Speculum (medical)

A speculum is a medical tool for investigating body cavities, with a form dependent on the body cavity for which it is designed. In old texts, the speculum may also be referred to as a diopter or dioptra....
 to minimize blinking during surgery. Pain is usually minimal in properly anesthetised eyes, though a pressure sensation and discomfort from the bright operating microscope light is common. The ocular surface is kept moist using sterile saline eyedrops or methylcellulose viscoelatic. The discission into the lens of the eye is performed at or near where the cornea
Cornea

The cornea is the transparency front part of the eye that covers the Iris , pupil, and anterior chamber. Together with the cilliary muscles, the cornea reflects light, and as a result helps the eye to dilate, accounting for approximately two-thirds of the eye's total optical power....
 and sclera
Sclera

The sclera, also known as the white of the eye, is the opaque , fibrous, protective, outer layer of the eye containing collagen and elastic fibers....
 meet (limbus = corneoscleral junction). Advantages of the smaller incision include use of few or no stitches and shortened recovery time. . A capsulotomy (rarely known as cystotomy) is a procedure to open a portion of the lens capsule, using an instrument called a cystotome. An anterior capsulotomy refers to the opening of the front portion of the lens capsule, whereas a posterior capsulotomy refers to the opening of the back portion of the lens capsule. In phacoemulsification, the surgeon performs an anterior continuous curvilinear capsulorhexis
Capsulorhexis

Capsulorhexis is a technique used to remove the lens capsule during cataract surgery. The spelling has varied between having one or two 'r's. It generally refers to removal of a part of the anterior lens capsule, but in situations like a developmental cataract a part of the posterior capsule is also removed by a similar technique....
, to create a round and smooth opening through which the lens nucleus can be emulsified and the intraocular lens implant inserted.

Following cataract removal (via ECCE or phacoemulsification, as described above), an intraocular lens is usually inserted. After the IOL is inserted, the surgeon checks that the incision does not leak fluid. This is a very important step, since wound leakage increases the risk of unwanted microrganisms to gain access into the eye and predispose to endophathalmitis. An antibiotic/steroid combination eye drop is put and an eye shield may be applied on the operated eye, sometimes supplemented with an eye patch.

Antibiotics may be administered pre-operatively, intra-operatively, and/or post-operatively. Frequently a topical corticosteroid
Corticosteroid

Corticosteroids are a class of steroid hormones that are produced in the adrenal cortex. Corticosteroids are involved in a wide range of physiology systems such as stress , immune system and regulation of inflammation, carbohydrate metabolism, protein catabolism, blood electrolyte levels, and behavior....
 is used in combination with topical antibiotics postoperatively.

Most cataract operations are performed under a local anaesthetic, allowing the patient to go home the same day. The use of an eye patch may be indicated, usually for about some hours, after which the patient is instructed to started using the eyedrops to control the inflammation and the antibiotics that prevent infection.

Occasionally, a peripheral iridectomy may be performed to minimize the risk of pupillary block glaucoma. An opening through the iris can be fashioned manually (surgical iridectomy
Iridectomy

An iridectomy, also known as a surgical iridectomy or corectomy, is the surgery removal of part of the Iris . These procedures are most frequently performed in the treatment of closed-angle glaucoma and iris melanoma....
) or with a laser (called YAG-laser iridotomy). The laser peripheral iridotomy may be performed either prior to or following cataract surgery.

The iridectomy hole is larger when done manually than when performed with a laser. When the manual surgical procedure is performed, some negative side effects may occur, such as that the opening of the iris can be seen by others (aesthetics), and the light can fall into the eye through the new hole, creating some visual disturbances . In the case of visual disturbances, the eye and brain often learn to compensate and ignore the disturbances over a couple of months. Sometimes the peripheral iris opening can heal, which means that the hole ceases to exist. This is the reason why the surgeon sometimes makes two holes, so that at least one hole is kept open.

After the surgery, the patient is instructed to use anti-inflammatory and antibiotic eye drops for up to two weeks (depending on the inflammation status of the eye and some other variables). The eye surgeon will judge, based on each patient's idiosyncrasies, the time length to use the eye drops. The eye will be mostly recovered within a week, and complete recovery should be expected in about a month. The patient should not participate in contact/extreme sports until cleared to do so by the eye surgeon.

Complications

Complications after cataract surgery are relatively uncommon.
  • Some people can develop a posterior capsular opacification (also called an after-cataract). As a physiological change expected after cataract surgery, the posterior capsular cells undergo hyperplasia and cellular migration, showing up as a thickening, opacification and clouding of the posterior lens capsule (which is left behind when the cataract was removed, for placement of the IOL). This may compromise visual acuity
    Visual acuity

    Visual acuity is acuteness or clearness of visual perception, especially form vision, which is dependent on the sharpness of the retinal focus within the eye and the sensitivity of the interpretative faculty of the brain....
     and the ophthalmologist can use a device to correct this situation. It can be safely and painlessly corrected using a laser
    Laser

    A laser is a device that emits light through a process called stimulated emission. The term laser is an acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation....
     device to make small holes in the posterior lens capsule of the crystalline. It usually is a quick outpatient procedure that uses a Nd-YAG laser (neodymium-yttrium-aluminum-garnet) to disrupt and clear the central portion of the opacified posterior lens capsule (posterior capsulotomy). This creates a clear central visual axis for improving visual acuity. . In very thick opacified posterior capsules, a surgical (manual) capsulectomy is the surgical procedure performed.
  • Posterior capsular tear may be a complication during cataract surgery. It refers to a rupture of the posterior capsule of the natural lens. Surgical management may involve anterior vitrectomy
    Vitrectomy

    Vitrectomy is a surgery to remove some or all of the Vitreous humour from the eye. Anterior vitrectomy entails removing small portions of the vitreous from the front structures of the eye - often because these are tangled in an intraocular lens or other structures....
     and, occasionally, alternative planning for implanting the intraocular lens, either in the ciliary sulcus, in the anterior chamber (in front of the iris), or, less commonly, sutured to the sclera.
  • Retinal detachment
    Retinal detachment

    Retinal detachment is a disorder of the eye in which the retina peels away from its underlying layer of support tissue. Initial detachment may be localized, but without rapid treatment the entire retina may detach, leading to vision loss and blindness....
     is an uncommon complication of cataract surgery, which may occur weeks, months, or even years later.
  • Toxic Anterior Segment Syndrome
    Toxic Anterior Segment Syndrome

    Toxic Anterior Segment Syndrome is an acute, sterile anterior segment inflammation following generally uneventful cataract and anterior segment surgery....
     or TASS is a non-infectious inflammatory condition that may occur following cataract surgery. It is usually treated with topical corticosteroids in high dosage and frequency.
  • Endophthalmitis
    Endophthalmitis

    Endophthalmitis is an inflammation of the internal coats of the eye. It is a dreaded complication of all eye surgery, particularly cataract surgery, with possible vision loss and the eye itself....
     is a serious infection of the intraocular tissues, usually following intraocular surgery, or penetrating trauma. There is some concern that the clear cornea incision might predispose to the increase of endophalmitis but is no conclusive study to corroborate this suspicion.
  • Glaucoma
    Glaucoma

    Glaucoma is a group of diseases of the optic nerve involving loss of ganglion cell in a characteristic pattern of optic atrophy. Raised intraocular pressure is a significant risk factor for developing glaucoma ....
     may occur and it may be very difficult to control. It is usually associated with inflammation, specially when little fragments or chunks of the nucleus get access to the vitreous cavity. Some experts recommend early intervention when this condition happens (posterior pars plana vitrectomy). In some patients, the intraocular pressure may remain so high that blindness may ensue.
  • Other possible complications include: Swelling or edema of the cornea, sometimes associated with cloudy vision, which may be transient or permanent (pseudophakic bullous keratopathy). Displacement or dislocation of the intraocular lens implant may rarely occur, as well as swelling or edema of the central part of the retina, called macula, resulting in cystoid macular edema. Unplanned high refractive error (either myopic or hypermetropic) may occur due to error in the ultrasonic ecobiometry (measure of the length and the required intra-ocular lens power). Cyanopsia
    Cyanopsia

    Cyanopsia is a ophthalmology term for Visual perception everything tinted with blue. It is also referred to as blue vision. Cyanopsia often occurs for a few days, weeks, or months after removal of a cataract from the eye....
    , in which the patient sees everything tinted with blue, often occurs for a few days, weeks or months after removal of a cataract. Floater
    Floater

    Floaters are deposits of various size, shape, consistency, refractive index, and motility within the eye's vitreous humour, which is normally transparent....
    s commonly appear after surgery.
Posterior Capsular Opacification On Retroillumination

History


The earliest records are from the Bible
Bible

The Bible is the central religious text of Judaism and Christianity. The exact Books of the Bible is dependent on the religious traditions of specific denominations....
 as well as early Hindu records. Cataract surgery was known to the India
India

India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
n physician Sushruta
Sushruta

Sushruta was a surgeon and teacher of Ayurveda who flourished in the Indian city of Varanasi by the 6th century BC. The medical treatise Sushruta Samhita?compiled in Vedic Sanskrit?is attributed to him....
 (6th century BCE). In India, cataract surgery was performed with a special tool called the Jabamukhi Salaka, a curved needle used to loosen the lens and push the cataract out of the field of vision. The eye would later be soaked with warm butter and then bandaged. Though this method was successful, Susruta cautioned that cataract surgery should only be performed when absolutely necessary. Greek
Greece

Greece , officially the Hellenic Republic , is a country in southeastern Europe, situated on the southern end of the Balkans. It has borders with Albania, Bulgaria and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia to the north, and Turkey to the east....
 philosophers and scientists traveled to Indo-Greek Kingdom
Indo-Greek Kingdom

The Indo-Greek Kingdom covered various parts of the northwest and northern Indian subcontinent during the last two centuries BC, and was ruled by more than 30 Hellenistic civilization kings, often in conflict with each other....
 where these surgeries were performed by physicians. The removal of cataract by surgery was also introduced into China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 from India.

In the Western world, bronze instruments that could have been used for cataract surgery have been found in excavations in Babylonia
Babylonia

Babylonia was a state in Lower Mesopotamia , Babylon as its franklin. Babylonia emerged when Hammurabi created an empire out of the territories of the former kingdoms of Sumer and Akkad....
, Greece
Greece

Greece , officially the Hellenic Republic , is a country in southeastern Europe, situated on the southern end of the Balkans. It has borders with Albania, Bulgaria and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia to the north, and Turkey to the east....
, and Egypt
Egypt

Egypt is a country mainly in North Africa, with the Sinai Peninsula forming a land bridge in Western Asia. Covering an area of about , Egypt borders the Mediterranean Sea to the north, the Gaza Strip and Israel to the northeast, the Red Sea to the east, Sudan to the south and Libya to the west....
.

The first references to cataract and its treatment in the West are found in 29 AD in De Medicinae, the work of the Latin encyclopedist Aulus Cornelius Celsus
Aulus Cornelius Celsus

Aulus Cornelius Celsus was a Ancient Rome encyclopedist, known for his Extant literature medical work, De Medicina, which is believed to be the only surviving section of a much larger encyclopedia....
. The Romans
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 were pioneers in the health arena - particularly in the area of eye care.

The first extracapsular cataract surgery using a sharply pointed instrument with a handle fashioned into a trough was described in Sushruta Samhita
Sushruta Samhita

The Sushruta Samhita is a Sanskrit text on surgery, attributed to Sushruta, , the "father of Surgery". The original manuscript has not survived, and only "copies of copies and revisions of revisions" exist....
. This technique is known to have existed in India as described and performed by Sushruta
Sushruta

Sushruta was a surgeon and teacher of Ayurveda who flourished in the Indian city of Varanasi by the 6th century BC. The medical treatise Sushruta Samhita?compiled in Vedic Sanskrit?is attributed to him....
 sometime in early BC. Another early operation to treat cataracts was couching, in which a thin needle or stick was used to remove the clouding by displacing the lens of the eye into the vitreous. This technique, intended to restore partial vision, is known to have existed in ancient times and continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages
Middle Ages

File:Karl 1 mit papst gelasius gregor1 sacramentar v karl d kahlen.jpgThe Middle Ages of European history are a period in history which lasted for roughly a millennium, commonly dated from the fall of the Roman Empire in the 5th century to the beginning of the Early Modern Period in the 16th century, marked by the division of Western Christi...
 and is still used in some parts of Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
 - However, it has now been replaced by extracapsular cataract surgery and, especially, phacoemulsification.

In medieval Arabic medicine, the Iraqi ophthalmologist
Ophthalmology in medieval Islam

Ophthalmology was one of the foremost branches in medieval Islamic medicine. The oculist or kahhal , a somewhat despised professional in Galen?s time, was an honored member of the medical profession by the Abbasid period, occupying a unique place in royal households....
 Ammar ibn Ali of Mosul
Mosul

Mosul is a city in northern Iraq and the capital of the Ninawa Governorate, some 400 km northwest of Baghdad. The original city stands on the west bank of the Tigris River, opposite the ancient city of Nineveh on the east bank, but the metropolitan area has now grown to encompass substantial areas on both banks, with five bridges linkin...
 performed the first extraction of cataracts through suction
Suction

Suction is the flow of a fluid into a partial vacuum, or region of low pressure. The pressure gradient force between this region and the ambient pressure will propel matter toward the low pressure area....
. He invented a hollow metallic syringe
Syringe

A syringe is a simple piston pump consisting of a plunger that fits tightly in a tube. The plunger can be pulled and pushed along inside a cylindrical tube , allowing the syringe to take in and expel a liquid or gas through an orifice at the open end of the tube....
 hypodermic needle
Hypodermic needle

A hypodermic needle is a hollow needle commonly used with a syringe to Injection substances into the body. They may also be used to take liquid samples from the body, for example taking blood from a vein in venipuncture....
, which he applied through the sclerotic and extracted the cataracts using suction. In his Choice of Eye Diseases, written in circa 1000, he wrote the following on his invention of the hypodermic needle and how he discovered the technique of cataract extraction while experiment
Experiment

In scientific inquiry, an experiment is a method of investigating causal relationships among variables. An experiment is a cornerstone of the empiricism approach to acquiring data about the world and is used in both natural sciences and social sciences....
ing with it on a patient:

In 1748, Jacques Daviel
Jacques Daviel

Jacques Daviel was a French ophthalmologist credited with originating the first significant advance in cataract surgery since couching was invented in ancient India....
 was the first European physician to successfully extract cataracts from the eye. In the 1940s Harold Ridley
Harold Ridley (ophthalmologist)

Sir Nicholas Harold Lloyd Ridley was an England ophthalmologist who pioneered artificial intraocular lens transplant surgery for cataract patients....
 introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens
Intraocular lens

An intraocular lens is an implanted lens in the eye, usually replacing the existing lens because it has been clouded over by a cataract, or as a form of refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power....
 which permitted more efficient and comfortable visual rehabilitation possible after cataract surgery. The implantation of foldable intraocular lens is the procedure considered the state-of-the-art.

In 1967, Charles Kelman
Charles Kelman

Charles D. Kelman was an ophthalmologist and a pioneer in cataract surgery.Kelman was born in Brooklyn, New York to David and Eva Kelman. He grew up in Queens where he attended Forest Hills High School....
 introduced phacoemulsification
Phacoemulsification

Phacoemulsification refers to modern cataract surgery in which the eye's internal lens is emulsified with an ultrasound handpiece, and aspirated from the eye....
, a technique that uses ultrasonic waves to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens in order to remove the cataracts without a large incision. This new method of surgery decreased the need for an extended hospital stay and made the surgery ambulatorial. Patients who undergo cataract surgery hardly complain of pain or even discomfort during the procedure. However patients who have topical, rather than peribulbar block, anesthesia may experience some discomfort.

According to surveys of members of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, approximately 2.85 million cataracts procedures were performed in the United States during 2004 and 2.79 million in 2005 .

In India
India

India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
, modern surgery with intraocular lens
Intraocular lens

An intraocular lens is an implanted lens in the eye, usually replacing the existing lens because it has been clouded over by a cataract, or as a form of refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power....
 insertion in Government- and Non Government Organisation (NGO)-sponsored Eye Surgical Camps have replaced older surgical procedures.

See also

  • Eye surgery
    Eye surgery

    Eye surgery, also known as orogolomistician surgery or ocular surgery, is surgery performed on the eye or its adnexa, typically by an ophthalmologist....
  • Africa Cataract Project
    Africa Cataract Project

    Africa Cataract Project is a mission of two Turkish NGOs in Africa to give support to prevention of blindness. The project targets 100.000 free cataract surgery in ten African countries which are Sudan, Ethopia, Somalia, Chad, Nijer, Togo, Benin, Gana, Mali and Burkina Faso....


Bibliography

  • Finger, Stanley (2001). Origins of Neuroscience: A History of Explorations Into Brain Function. US: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195146948.
  • Lade, Arnie & Svoboda, Robert (2000). Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 812081472X.


External links

MedRounds.org, Publisher and Distributor of Educational Material