Distefano Eye Center - Chattanooga Ophthalmologist   
  
423-648-3937

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IOL - Intraocular Lens

When you have a cataract, the lens of your eye becomes cloudy. Light cannot pass through the lens easily, and your vision becomes blurred. During cataract surgery, we remove the cloudy, natural lens and replace it with a clear, artificial lens called an intraocular lens (IOL). The IOL helps your eye regain its focusing ability and allows you to see clearly again.

Healthy Eye
Cataract Eye

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The most common type of IOL is the monofocal or fixed-focus IOL. The monofocal lens helps you attain  clearer vision at one distance. Eyeglasses and contact lenses are still required in order for you to see clearly at all ranges of distance.

Another type of IOL is the multifocal IOL. The multifocal lens has several rings of different powers built into the lens. The part of the ring you look through will determine if you can see clearly at far, near or intermediate distances.

logos Tecnis Acrysof Crystalens

Tecnis® multifocal lens - The advanced TECNIS® Multifocal is an implantable lens that restores vision after cataract surgery and corrects presbyopia (the need for reading glasses). It delivers results superior to those of a standard multifocal lens and offers an excellent chance to become spectacle independent.



Acrysof® IQ ReSTOR® IOL - For most patients this implantable lens delvers excellent near, intermediate and distance vision, potentially without the need for reading glasses or bifocals in a variety of lighting conditions.



Crystalens® accommodating intraocular lens - the first presbyopia correcting IOL introduced into the United States market and is currently the only FDA-approved accommodating IOL.


A third type of IOL is the accommodative IOL. The accommodative lens has a hinge designed to work with your eye muscles, allowing the lens to move forward as the eye focuses on near objects and backward as the eye focuses on distant objects. This movement allows you to focus clearly at different distances.

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Implanting an IOL takes about 20 minutes and is an outpatient procedure.  In addition to a preoperative eye exam, your eye surgeon will take some measurements of your eyes and will give you topical or local anesthesia.  The surgeon makes a few small incisions close to the edge of the cornea and then inserts a small ultrasound instrument to break up the center of the eye's natural lens.  The lens is then vacuumed out through one of the incisions.  The surgeon folds and inserts the IOL through the same incision.  These incisions are usually self-sealing, requiring no stitches.  Once implanted, a multifocal or accomodative IOL allows you to focus on near or distant objects.

Risks associated with implanting IOL's include overcorrection or under-correction, infection, increased floaters, retinal detachment, dislocation of the implant, halos, glare, dry eye, decreased contrast sensitivity, clouding of a portion of the IOL, and loss of vision.

If you are going to have cataract surgery, you and your ophthalmologist at DiStefano Eye Center should discuss which IOL may be best for your vision needs.  We will help you understand all of your options and make a choice that reflects your physical condition and lifestyle choices.

 

Contact

 
 
 
 
 

Gunbarrel Office

Map

1815 Gunbarrel Rd.
Chattanooga, TN 
37421

M - Th  8am - 5pm
F  8am - noon

PH:  423-648-3937
LINE2: 423-648-3937
FAX:  (423) 648 - 2043

klee@distefanolaser.com

Cleveland Location

Map

2415 Chambliss Ave.
Cleveland, TN 
37311

Duncan Eye Center
PH:  423-714-7540
FAX:  (423) 648 - 2043

klee@distefanolaser.com

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