2008-05-25

Soldiers Receive Free Memorial Day Lasik Surgery Before Going to Iraq

BERGENFIELD, N.J., May 23 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Two-dozen members of the Army's 2nd Battalion, 113th Infantry Regiment yesterday captured the offices of Dello Russo LaserVision, getting ready for their upcoming deployment in Iraq. Instead of shooting targets with blurry eyes, they were undergoing a Lasik procedure that allows them to have 20/20 vision within an hour.

Drs. Joseph and Jeffery Dello Russo marked the 3rd time in what became an annual celebration of patriotism, providing free corrective eye surgeries to members of the U.S. military before they go to their missions overseas.

The Dello Russos have completed another round of Free Lasik surgeries in their Manhattan location, helping another dozen of soldiers to get rid of their eyeglasses and contact lenses. Some of them have been waiting for years to get this treatment, but were not able to afford it before receiving bonuses following their return from Iraq.

source: PR Newswire

2008-05-22

Global Laser Vision Surpasses 1,000 i-LASIK (iLASIK)

San Diego, CA (PRWEB) May 22, 2008 -- Global Laser Vision Medical Centers, the premier center for Laser Vision Correction in San Diego and Orange County, has now treated over 1,000 vision correction patients with advanced i-LASIK, also known as Intralase or All Laser Lasik.

The IntraLase FS (femtosecond) replaces the older technology of using a hand-held microkeratome with a blade to create a corneal flap, in the first step of LASIK. The computer-guided, ultrafast laser reduces the most severe, sight-threatening LASIK complications related to the use of microkeratomes.

Since its establishment in June 2000, Global Laser Vision Medical has remained a leader and at the forefront of LASIK technologies, with over 50,000 surgeries performed by our doctors. In striving to offer their patients the state-of-the-art vision technology in Southern California, the surgeons of Global Laser Vision have become experts in the use of advanced i-LASIK, an instrument that has even been fully accepted by NASA and the military for their personnel.

source: PR WEB

2008-05-21

Presby-LASIK may be better option than multifocal IOLs, study shows

PARIS — Both multifocal IOLs and presby-LASIK are viable solutions for presbyopia correction, but the latter has a greater range of visual acuity at different distances, according to a study presented here.

"Presbyopic LASIK using the Gaussian ablation type, which means a +1.7 D, 3-mm optical zone, slightly decentered 1 mm inferiorly and nasally, is able to provide an acceptable level of distance vision, on average 20/25 to 20/20 and up to 20/18 in some cases, along with an acceptable or even very good level of near and intermediate vision," Michael Assouline, MD, said at the meeting of the French Society of Ophthalmology.

In comparison, multifocal IOLs have shown less satisfactory visual performance.

source: OSN Supersite

2008-05-16

Advanced Medical Optics Receives FDA Clearance For iFS(TM) Advanced Femtosecond Laser

New 5th Generation Laser Essential Part of iLASIK(TM) Technology Suite

SANTA ANA, Calif., May 14, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Advanced Medical Optics, Inc. (AMO) (NYSE: EYE), a global leader in ophthalmic surgical devices and eye care products, today announced U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for the iFS(TM) Advanced Femtosecond Laser.

Capable of creating a corneal flap during the LASIK procedure in less than 10 seconds, the iFS(TM) Advanced Femtosecond Laser's unique inverted bevel-in side cut angle is designed to provide a virtually effortless flap lift, increase post-operative flap adhesion and enhance the biomechanical stability of the post-LASIK cornea. With full customization capabilities, it also produces an elliptical flap to enhance surgical options and includes IntraLase-Enabled Keratoplasty (IEK).

source: Advanced Medical Optics

2008-05-05

Experts urge clearer warnings about Lasik risks

A panel of medical advisers — mostly eye doctors wearing glasses — listened to tales of woe and wonder on April 25 from people who sought to get rid of their specs through Lasik surgery.

What was clear by day's end: The vast majority of people undergoing laser eye surgery benefit and are happy, but a small fraction, perhaps fewer than 1 percent, suffer serious, life-changing side effects: worse vision, painful dry eye, glare, inability to drive at night.

Advisers to the Food and Drug Administration heard about a dozen of those stories April 25 — including a father reading his son's suicide note — and then concluded that today's warnings for would-be Lasik recipients should be made more clear.

source: Monterey Herald