Search clinical trials by condition, location and status
This study is a Single center, single arm, prospective, observational study of clinical outcomes following bilateral cataract surgery and Clareon PanOptix implantation. Subjects will be assessed preoperatively, and at 1 and 3 months postoperatively. Clinical evaluations will include administration of the QUVID and IOLSAT questionnaires, manifest refraction, topography, as well as measurement of visual acuities at distance, intermediate, and near.
Corrective eye surgeries, such as Lasik, are widely used to correct focusing problems such as myopia, or nearsightedness. Often these patients develop other conditions like myopic maculopathy or glaucoma which require monitoring with optical coherence tomography (OCT). Since OCT is a light-based test and changes the refractive status of the eye (in the cornea or the lens), it can potentially affect the results of the OCT measurements but has not been sufficiently studied. This pilot study aims at studying the potential change in OCT parameters in the eye after undergoing such surgery.
The objectives of this post market registry are to evaluate the safety and durability of treatment effect up to 3 years following cross-linking performed with Photrexa Viscous (riboflavin 5'- phosphate in 20% dextran ophthalmic solution), Photrexa (riboflavin 5'- phosphate ophthalmic solution), and the KXL System in patients with corneal ectasia following refractive surgery.
The long-term goal of this project is to utilize very high-speed optical coherence tomography (OCT) technology to guide surgical treatments of corneal diseases. OCT is well known for its exquisite resolution, but until recently it has not had sufficient speed to capture the shape of the cornea because of eye motion during OCT scanning. The development of Fourier-domain (FD) OCT technology has made the requisite speed possible. The objective of this project is to develop methods for imaging the cornea with an FD-OCT system that will precisely measure corneal shape and use this information to guide surgery. Cataract surgery in patients with previous laser vision correction often leads to significant near- or far-sightedness, a problem that could be resolved by using a more accurate intraocular lens power selection formula based on the measurement of corneal refractive power with OCT.
This is a study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the AccuraSee™ intraocular pseudophakic capsular lens (IOPCL) to improve near and/or intermediate vision following previous cataract surgery.
This is a prospective randomized contralateral double-masked study. Each patient will be randomized as to which eye undergoes wave-front optimized (WFO) vs. wave-front guided (WFG) during Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) or Laser-assisted in situ Keratomileusis (LASIK) surgery to determine which ablation profile provides the best visual outcome.