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Cataract Surgery as it may effect us as Photographers

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airgunr

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There is an article in the September 2014 issue of Sky & Telescope magazine called, "Cataract Surgery for Astronomers".

I think it has an important bearing on us as photographers as well. It is well worth reading and explains some things to be aware of and ask your doctor about.

If anyone wants, contact me with you e-mail and I'll send a couple of PDF files I scanned of the article. (had to break it into 2 files to get it small enough to e-mail)
 
Thread moved to "miscellaneous equipment" for lack of a better option. "Feedback and Discussion" is for feedback about the APUG forum.
 
AFAIK, this is a recent copyright article. Please be careful what you upload/download. I just saw the same article and had the same surgery.

PE
 
I had my first cataract surgery at 35 years old..It was botched, my eye hacked up and almost blind in the eye. Some years later my new surgeon replaced the bad lens, repaired the irridectomy, placed 24 sutures to keep my pupil round. I have similar issues with the other eye..I still have no problems making pictures with view cameras.
 
I had cataract surgery on both eyes last year and find photography easier than in a long time. It does mean using reading glasses and magnifiers for some work, but the improved vision far outweighs that minor inconvenience.
 
AFAIK, this is a recent copyright article. Please be careful what you upload/download. I just saw the same article and had the same surgery.

PE

I did not think about this but you are correct, I probably should not send this out. I would urge anyone interested to go and buy the current September 2014 Issue. My intention was only to get the information out as I think it would help some of us who are probably going to have to deal with this at some point. :whistling:
 
My father had cataract surgery on his one 'good' eye. He only had sight in one eye and that was so near sighted that he needed either a ridiculously thick glasses lens or a contact lens which was a few Dioptres stronger than the company officially made them.

When he had the cataract surgery, he was amazed at what he could see. Everything from his arm's length to infinity was in focus. He spebt a few months just walking around looking at things.

All from an operation which was carried out through a cut in the eye just a few mm long. The old lens is destroyed ultrasonically and removed with a syringe then the replacement lens is inserted, rolled up, via another syringe.


Steve.
 
I marvel at the technology. When my mother had cataract surgery in the early 80s she spent 4 days in the hospital. Whenever I've had it I've gone to an outpatient surgery center on a Wednesday, take it easy the rest of the day, go to have a followup visit with the surgeon on Thursday morning, and I'm back in the office on Friday. It's one area of medicine that gives us truly miraculous and immediate results.
 
My aunt had sandbags holding her head still for those few days she was totally immobilized and then she spent extra days there, but still restrained to keep her head from moving. It was a real ordeal in the '70s and '80s.

PE
 
My aunt had sandbags holding her head still for those few days she was totally immobilized and then she spent extra days there, but still restrained to keep her head from moving. It was a real ordeal in the '70s and '80s.

As a young man in the early 1960s, my father spent three months in hospital permanently on his back, unable to move, in an attempt to save a detached retina.


Steve.
 
As a young man in the early 1960s, my father spent three months in hospital permanently on his back, unable to move, in an attempt to save a detached retina.

I had a similar experience with an older sister. She had a detached retina in the early 1960s and as part of the recovery, another sister and my mother took turns watching her sleep so that she would not move accidentally. With that in my memory, I was diagnosed with a torn (not detached) retina in 2000 and I nearly had a panic attack. However, the ophthalmologist immediately sent me over to a specialist, who repaired the tear with a laser in about five minutes, with no sensation other then the extremely bright light. (Think holding a strobe flash directly in front of your eyes and setting it off several times) :blink:


In 2009, I, indeed, had a detached retina in the other eye. It, too was repaired. Not as quickly or as simply as the tear, but relatively easily and as an outpatient. Technology has greatly improved in 50 years, as one might expect.

Now, I am growing a cataract in one eye. It has caused me to change eyes as to which one I use in the viewfinders and grain focusers. It's not near bad enough to address surgically. But I almost have mixed feelings about it. Once it reaches that point, and is replaced, I'll probably see better than I have since childhood.
 
My father's 1960s detached retina 'surgery' didn't work and he had sight in one eye for most of his life. In the 1980s, the retina in his other eye started moving.

Laser treatment was very new at the time and he didn't get that. Instead, they placed soft foam pieces behind his eye to apply pressure making the retina and eye make contact and join together again. This time the operation worked.

My father realised his second detachment was happening whilst he was driving his company's car. He stopped immediately, abandonning it in the midde of the road and walked to his optician.


Steve.
 
I told my surgeon that I wished they could do for ears what they do for eyes. The eye improvement was spectacular! Now I need new ears.

PE
 
Pardon?
 
It was an attempt at humour. Quite a commonplace retort to one complaining of deafness over here. Perhaps just a British thing.
 
I understood it. I was making a lame retort. After all, if you were blind, you could not have read my post, but if you were deaf no one could read it to you! :smile:

PE
 
Oh Lord I wish I hadn't tried! I'm the one to feel lame now :smile:

Although (not a joke) if there was something I could get done about my tinnitus I'd be a happy chappy ...
 
I think that the whole exchange was amusing. No need to feel bad. After all, if you can see and hear, you are alive! :D

PE
 
If you can see and hear, you are alive! :D

PE

Exactly. I'm in my mid-forties, and nearsighted enough that so far when I need to see close up, I take my glasses off. I had major health problems from birth to age 3, so my philosophy is: Any day you can wake up and move around is a good day.

My dad had cataract surgery in the 90's, and had to wear an eye patch for a while and was off work. It was related to being a carpenter who was foolish and didn't wear safety glasses. Ended up having to have surgery on his left eye in the early 1970s because of a 16d nail. Hasn't been the same since, though he saw better after all was said and done with the cataract surgery than he had for years.
 
Now, I am growing a cataract in one eye. It has caused me to change eyes as to which one I use in the viewfinders and grain focusers. It's not near bad enough to address surgically. But I almost have mixed feelings about it. Once it reaches that point, and is replaced, I'll probably see better than I have since childhood.

I had an optometrist scare me by saying my lenses were yellowing though "age normal." A later (older and far more experienced) optometrist poo-pooed that and labeled them "clear" and said I was fine. My Aviation Medical Examiner, upon relating this story, said much of what you did, "today's implants are so good, while it's not really something to look forward to, in 20 years or whenever you need it you'll be amazed. You'll see better than you have since your teens."

My dad insists his cause flare at night. I think he just got used to the dimmed view as his natural lenses slowly yellowed and darkened. :wink:
 
Exactly. I'm in my mid-forties, and nearsighted enough that so far when I need to see close up, I take my glasses off. I had major health problems from birth to age 3, so my philosophy is: Any day you can wake up and move around is a good day.

This will probably continue to be true, at least until you need cataract surgery. I had to go to progressives for near vision in my early 40s but for my absolute best near vision I still prop my glasses up on my forehead. It gets weird looks and even occasional argument from those who are not and have never been nearsighted.

If you see a guy in my area with his head under a view camera dark cloth, his glasses dangling from his teeth while he uses a loupe to check the ground glass, it may be me. :wink:
 
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