Archive for the ‘cataracts’ Category

Now A Healthspring Cataract Vision Correction Provider!

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

If you missed the big news from Arrowsmith Eye Institute, we are now a provider for HealthSpring. We feel that with this new set of credentials we will be able to provide our superior results to a new field of patients. This is a time in which dreams of clear, natural vision are becoming a true reality for millions of men and women whose vision has been clouded by cataracts. Contact us for further information!

HealthSpring is one of the largest Medicare Advantage coordinated care plans in the United States. Our concentration on this market has allowed us to develop a unique approach to health care coverage for Medicare beneficiaries. C/O HealthSpring, Inc.

Correcting Cataracts – The RLE Solution, Pt. 3

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

For the last part of our Vision Correction Frequently Asked Questions series, we want to address cataract vision correction. We have received a few questions pertaining to cataracts and related cataract surgeries. One question, “What is RLE and how will it help my cataracts?” comes across Dr. Arrowsmith’s desk more frequently now.

According to The University of Washington Department of Ophthalmology (2004), 5,500,000 individuals suffer from cataracts with 400,000 new cases each year. Phacoemulsification for Cataract Surgery or Refractive Lens Exchange (RLE) with Advanced Lens Implants offers options for correcting cataracts. Phacoemulsification (Phaco=lens, emulsify=to liquefy) is used in removal of a cataract, which is a clouded natural lens. With RLE it can also be used to remove a clear natural lens – not yet developed into a cataract – simply to correct vision as an alternative to Bladeless LASIK or Phakic IOL’s.

With Phacoemulsification, an instrument uses ultrasound (like a laser, but using concentrated sound waves instead of light waves) to delicately liquefy and remove the center of the eye’s natural lens, leaving a clear, cellophane-like outer layer of the lens intact. Then, an Aphakic IOL (an IOL used after removal of the eye’s natural lens) is placed inside the cellophane-like layer replacing the central, vision-correcting part of the natural lens. Aphakic IOL’s are very advanced and will correct Nearsightedness, Farsightedness, Astigmatism (Toric IOL’s) and Presbyopia (difficulty with reading vision) just like LASIK. New types of Aphakic IOL’s can correct both distance and near vision at the same time. Often referred to as Presbyopia Correcting IOL’s or Premium IOL’s (PIOL’s), these include the Crystalens, ReSTOR Lens and the ReZoom Lens and others.

Patients are offered lenses that best meet their needs and their lifestyle, and together we will talk about and choose the right lens for you.