Implantable Lens Option
The FDA just gave conditional approval for implantable lenses. I had first heard about them a couple of weeks ago from an opthamologist I met by happenstance at the local science museum. The idea looks promising to pilots because there are only two very small incisions made (1-2mm?) and the lens is inserted. The intention is to create less damage to the cornea, thus reducing side effects such as glare and halo's. Another benefit would the be reversability of the procedure - unlike LASIK.
Here's one of the latest updates from Reuters:
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UPDATE 1-Staar lens implant backed by U.S. advisers
Fri October 3, 2003 06:09 PM ET
(Adds recommended conditions, background)
GAITHERSBURG, Md., Oct 3 (Reuters) - A U.S. advisory panel on Friday recommended approval of Staar Surgical Co.'s STAA.O implantable lens to correct near-sightedness, a possible alternative to laser eye surgery.
The final decision will be made by the Food and Drug Administration, which usually approves devices supported by its advisory panels.
The panel voted 8-3 to recommend approval with conditions that included further study of corneal cell loss in some patients.
Staar's product is a refractive lens that physicians inject through a small incision and place behind the iris.
The lens is designed to stay in place, but it can be removed and replaced if vision changes, the company said.
Staar has said it expects to reach profitability during the first half of next year if it wins a go-ahead to sell the lens in the United States. The lens already is sold in Europe and Asia.
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Good luck!
AKAAB
