Archive for March, 2010

What is “Custom Lasik”?

Friday, March 26th, 2010

I don’t  like to use the word  “custom” when referring to Lasik.  The term “Custom Lasik”  is misleading, because it implies that there is also some type of Lasik that is  non–custom.  Actually, every Lasik treatment for every eye  is specifically ‘customized’ to treat the vision in that eye,  just as every pair of glasses or contact lenses  is specifically ‘customized’ for the person who will be using them.

The term “Custom Lasik”, which is essentially a marketing gimmick, refers to an optical measurement known as the  wave front.  Notice how many vision correcting systems and lasers have the word ‘wave’ in their name.   The wave front is a concept described by the Belgian physicist  Zernike in 1934.

When a patient is measured for eye glasses or contact lenses, we put a series of lenses in front of each eye and ask, “which is better, this lens or that lens”.  This kind of testing is used to  measure lower order aberrations, and it is excellent for glasses and contact lenses.  Wave front technology can be used to measure higher order aberrations, which can be  important part of Lasik treatments.  All modern Lasik treatments correct lower order aberrations, and combine that with one of two different types of wave front treatments: Wave Front Guided (WFG) and Wave Front Optimized (WFO).  Most Lasik lasers in the United States can perform WFG treatments, but not WFO treatments.  The WaveLight Allegretto laser that we use at Barnet Dulaney Perkins Eye Center can do both WFG treatments and WFO treatments, although we definitely prefer to use WFO treatments for our patients.

My comments are not intended as a negative criticism of WFG Lasik treatments.  In eye surgery medical journals, some articles conclude  that WFO treatments are better than WFG treatments.  Some articles state the opposite.  Other articles  conclude that WFO and WFG produce equally good results.

Lasik treatments for patients who are nearsighted change the normal shape of the cornea (front ‘window’) of the eye in a way that actually induces a type of higher order aberration called spherical aberration.  Spherical aberration is  the leading cause of night time glare and halos around lights after ‘successful’  Lasik.  WFO treatments are specifically customized for every eye  to maintain the normal shape of the cornea.  WFG treatments do not  address this problem.  That is why the WaveLight Allegretto laser is the only Lasik laser in the United States approved by the FDA to reduce the risk of night time glare.

WFG treatments are intended to measure higher order aberrations that are present in the eye before Lasik and to correct them as part of the Lasik treatment in an attempt to get ‘super vision’.  A potential problem with WFG treatments is that higher order aberrations can change with time so that a WFG treatment that is correct for the eye now may not be correct in the future.

Ronald W. Barnet, MD

March 2010

Posted in lasik, Latest News

Dr. Scott Perkins and Staff Travel to Honduras for a Cataract Surgical Mission

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

February 15-19th 2010 Dr. Scott Perkins along with several Barnet Dulaney Perkins employees traveled to Toyos, Honduras for a Cataract Surgical Mission with the non-profit organization AZ Visionaries (www.azvisionaries.org) .The members of the team included Amber Gearhart, RN Assistant Director of Nursing; Kim Nichols, RN, Phoenix Surgery Center Manager; Sarah Walczak, Ophthalmic Scrub Technician and Michelle Minta, Nurse Anesthetist and founder of AZ Visionaries. The team traveled out of Phoenix at 12:30am on February 14th and arrived in San Pedro Sula, Honduras at noon on the same day. All the surgical supplies including the microscope and phaco-emulsification machine (for cataract removal) traveled with the team as checked baggage on the airplane. The team then set up the operating room after unpacking the 20+ boxes of supplies and equipment. They began operating the next day on February 15th and performed 26 cataract surgeries the first day.

Most of the surgical supplies were donated by Alcon Surgical. The surgical representative from Alcon, Mathew Greer, assisted in getting the supplies donated and also proved to be an essential team member of the surgical mission.

54 Cataract surgeries were performed by Dr. Perkins. A large percentage of the patients had “hand motion” or “count fingers” vision and were blind from their cataracts. The patients went from being blind one day to seeing their family members faces for the first time in years. It was a very successful and rewarding trip for all involved.

Posted in Latest News, Uncategorized

Aspen Invitational Refractive Symposium!

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Greetings to all from Aspen, Colorado, where I’m a participant in the annual Aspen Invitational Refractive Symposium (AIRS). One of the most important things we as eye surgeons can do is to keep abreast of all the latest advances in research, and share them with our colleagues from across the world. The AIRS meeting brings about 80 of the world’s top cataract and refractive surgery specialists together for what is in my experience the single best meeting to accomplish just that. Our very own Dr. David Dulaney is the meeting’s founder, and our practice has always played a key role in this effort to advance the amazing science behind the fields of cataract and refractive surgery. So thanks, Dr. Dulaney, for your key role as a pioneer in eye surgery not just in Phoenix, or Arizona, or even the US, but certainly across the world.

Robert Rivera, MD

Posted in Latest News, Uncategorized