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Phakic intraocular lenses.
Known technically as a phakic intraocular lens, Verisyse is inserted through a six millimeter incision between the cornea and the iris.
Phakic intraocular lens (PIOL) implantation inside the eye can also be used to change refractive errors.
The ICL is a posterior chamber, phakic intraocular lens used for the correction of moderate to high refractive errors.
These "phakic intraocular lenses" are for severe nearsightedness, too bad for Lasik and PRK.
Implantable lenses for adults, called phakic intraocular lenses or IOLs, hit the U.S. market in 2004.
Phakic intraocular lenses are contraindicated in patients who do not have a stable refraction for at least 6 months or are 21 years of age or younger.
Known complications from those products, known as phakic intraocular lenses, also can lead to complications similar to LASIK.
Iris-fixated phakic intraocular lens is an intraocular lens that is implanted surgically into the eye and fixated to the iris to correct myopia (nearsightedness).
This type of IOL is also called phakic intraocular lens (PIOL), and the crystalline lens is not removed.
For patients with moderate to high myopia or thin corneas which cannot be treated with LASIK and PRK, the phakic intraocular lens is an alternative.
Phakic intraocular lenses are indicated for patients with high refractive errors when the usual laser options for surgical correction (LASIK and PRK) are contraindicated.
Aside corneal refrative procedures (LASIK, PRK and LASEK), also introcular refractive procedures (phakic intraocular lenses, refractive lens exchange and clear lens extraction) are performed on children.
In ophthalmology, pilocarpine is also used to reduce the possibility of glare at night from lights when the patient has undergone implantation of phakic intraocular lenses; the use of pilocarpine would reduce the size of the pupils, relieving these symptoms.
The second type of IOL, more commonly known as a phakic intraocular lens (PIOL), is a lens which is placed over the existing natural lens, and is used in refractive surgery to change the eye's optical power as a treatment for myopia or nearsightedness.