Distefano Eye Center - Chattanooga Ophthalmologist   
  
423-648-3937

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Cataract Treatment in Chattanooga

Your eye works a lot like a camera.  Light rays focus through your lens onto the retina, a layer of light-sensitive cells at the back of the eye.  Similar to photographic film, the retina allows the image to be “seen” by the brain.

Over time, the lens of our eye can become cloudy, preventing light rays from passing clearly through the lens.  The loss of transparency may be so mild that vision is barely affected, or it can be so severe that no shapes or movements are seen—only light and dark.  When the lens becomes cloudy enough to obstruct vision to any significant degree, it is called a cataract.  Eyeglasses or contact lenses can usually correct slight refractive errors caused by early cataracts, but they cannot sharpen your vision if a severe cataract is present.

The most common cause of a cataract is aging.  Other causes include trauma, medications such as steroids, systemic diseases such as diabetes, and prolonged exposure to ultraviolet light.  Occasionally, babies are born with a cataract.

Eye function illustration

Cataracts typically develop slowly and progressively, causing a gradual and painless decrease in vision.  Other changes you might experience include blurry vision; glare, particularly at night; frequent changes in your eyeglass prescription; a decrease in color intensity; a yellowing of images; and, in rare cases, double vision.

As the eye’s natural lens gets harder, farsighted (presbyopic) people, who have difficulty focusing up close, can experience improved near vision and become less dependent on reading glasses.  However, nearsighted (myopic) people become more nearsighted, causing a worsening in their distance vision.  Some kinds of cataracts affect distance vision more than reading vision.  Others affect reading vision more than distance vision.

Reducing your exposure to ultraviolet light by wearing a wide-brimmed hat and sunglasses may reduce your risk for developing a cataract, but once one has developed, there is no cure except to have the cataract surgically removed.

 

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:  423-472-5401
FAX:  (423) 479-3060

klee@distefanolaser.com

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