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Cataract risk factors
- Cigarette smoking
- Diabetes Mellitus
- High cholesterol/triglycerides
- Steroid medication
- Excessive exposure to sunlight
- Eye injury
Painless and slow-growing, cataracts may require
specialized eye surgery
Here's a simple quiz for those over age 40:
- Do you have trouble reading highway signs,
particularly on bright days?
- Is your distance vision blurry, especially
outdoors?
- Is it difficult to discern the edges of stairs or
curbs?
If these symptoms apply to you, cataracts might be the
cause. A cataracts is a clouding of a clear lens within the
eye that blocks the passage of light needed for vision.
Cataracts form slowly and cause no pain. Some stay small
and hardly affect vision, but if the cataract increases and
begins to affect vision, it can usually be removed
surgically.
"While cataracts are one of the world's leading causes of
blindness, vision loss from cataracts is reversible in most
cases," says Tom Oetting, M.D., associate professor of
ophthalmology and visual sciences at University of Iowa
Hospitals and Clinics. "New techniques developed over the
past decade have made cataract surgery one of the most
successful procedures available for restoring quality of
life to patients."
Tim Johnson, M.D., associate professor of ophthalmology
and visual sciences, says cataracts cannot be made to
disappear with drugs or exercises.
"Cataract surgery is most often performed as an
outpatient procedure under local anesthesia," Johnson says.
"The cloudy natural lens can be replaced with a clear
artificial lens to give the eye proper focusing power. In
most cases, the improvement in the patient's vision is
profound."
So how does a person know if he or she has a cataract?
Oetting says some people notice a gradual painless
blurring of vision, double vision in one eye, or fading or
yellowing of colors.
"When my older patients mention sensitivity to glare
and/or bright light or trouble driving at night, I suspect a
cataract," he says."
Johnson dispels the notion that a cataract has to be
"ripe" before it's removed. The best time to have a cataract
removed is when it starts to interfere with the things you
like to do, he says.
"Cataract surgery is a great procedure, but it is still
surgery," Johnson says. "If cataracts don't affect your
quality of life, you may feel that surgery is not needed.
The only person who can really decide when it's time to have
it removed is you."
For more information, visit www.uihealthcare.com/eyecare
or call UI Health
Access toll free at 800-777-8442.
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