Most modern cataract surgeries involve replacing your cloudy lens with the intraocular lens (IOL). It is a flexible lens placed into your eye through smaller incisions. There are different types of intraocular lenses, which include:-
Monofocal IOLs: These are the most common IOLs used for close, medium, or long-range distance vision. With these lenses, you might be able to see things far away but need glasses for close vision.
Multifocal IOLs: These IOLs help you see things at different distances, i.e., they allow for both far and close focus simultaneously.
Accommodating IOLs: These flexible IOLs are more like your natural lens that focuses at different distances.
Toric IOLs: These lenses help correct astigmatism (an imperfection in the eye’s curvature).
Here’s how cataract surgery is performed:-
Step 1: Numbing Your Eyes
The surgeon will numb your eyes with either eye drops or an injection. He/she may also give you medication to relax. You will be awake throughout the surgery, seeing the light and movement during the procedure. But you won’t be able to see what the doctor is doing in your eye.
Step 2: Cataract Removal
The surgeon uses a special microscope to examine your eyes. He/she makes tiny incisions using a blade or a laser near the edge of your cornea. Using these incisions, the surgeon reaches your lens. He or she will then use ultrasound waves to break up the cloudy lens and remove it. Finally, the surgeon places the new lens into place.
Step 3: Placing a Shield
The surgeon does not need to use stitches to close the incision. These self-sealing, tiny incisions close by themselves. The surgeon will place a shield, such as an eye patch, over your eye to protect it during the healing process.
Types of Cataract Surgery
Phacoemulsification: The surgeon makes a two to a three-millimetre long incision in the front of the eye. He/she then uses an ultrasonic probe to break the cataract and remove the fragments with suction. The lens is then inserted through the incision, and the incision does not need sutures to heal.
Manual Extracapsular Cataract Surgery (MECS): The surgeon uses a nine to thirteen-millimetre long incision to replace the lens with IOL. It has a higher risk of complications as compared with phacoemulsification.
Manual Small Incision Cataract Surgery (MSICS): The surgeon makes a smaller V-shaped incision narrower on the outside (6.5 to 7 mm) and wider on the inside (11 mm) of the eye.
Femtosecond Laser-Assisted Cataract Surgery (FLACS): The surgeon uses a laser to make the incision in the eye instead of a manual incision. The procedure can be used to correct astigmatism.
Intracapsular Cataract Surgery: An older procedure that involves making a larger incision to remove the entire lens and lens capsule from the eye. Doctors rarely perform this procedure as it has a high risk of complications.