With newer technology,clear vision becomes accessible to the masses
Cataract is the leading cause of preventable blindness worldwide,accounting for more than 20 million cases. In India too,cataract contributes to 60-65 per cent of all cases of preventable and treatable blindness.
Another ingenious modification in the lens design is aspheric lens which eliminates the rainbow of colours in the peripheral vision which used to be associated with multifocal lens. For patients who have pre-existing astigmatism,there are special lenses called Toric lenses. These help patients to regain quality of vision without any annoying aberrations or distortions. Another breakthrough in modern cataract surgery,are the accommodative lenses,which move inside the eye as the focusing muscles of the eye contract,mimicking the eyes natural ability to focus. To put it simply,it makes a seventy-year-old eye function like a twenty-year-old one. Recently,with the use of Femtosecond lasers in cataract surgery,ophthalmologists have taken another step towards perfection. New developments in instrumentation and phaco machines have also shown some promising results.
Of course all these technologies come with a price,which may be well beyond the capacity of an average Indian. Does that mean good vision is the prerogative of only rich people? Not anymore,with some fine touches to the existing affordable technology,results can be equally precise,Joshi added. The manual Small Incision Cataract Surgery (SICS),even though touted as the poor cousin of phaco,does give good vision post-operatively. It remains the technique of choice in very high volume set ups because of its safety and affordability. Today,cataract surgery has moved from being a technique primarily concerned with safe removal of cloudy lens to refractive cataract surgery,a procedure refined to yield the best possible visual outcome.