fbpx
Wikipedia

History of cataract surgery

Cataract surgery has a long history in Europe, Asia, and Africa. It is one of the most common and successful surgical procedures in worldwide use, thanks to improvements in techniques for cataract removal and developments in intraocular lens (IOL) replacement technology, in implantation techniques, and in IOL design, construction, and selection.[1] Surgical techniques that have contributed to this success include microsurgery, viscoelastics, and phacoemulsification.[2]

Cataract surgery, using a temporal approach phacoemulsification probe (in right hand) and "chopper" (in left hand)

Cataract surgery is the removal of the natural lens of the eye that has developed a cataract, an opaque or cloudy area.[3] Over time, metabolic changes of the crystalline lens fibres lead to the development of a cataract, causing impairment or loss of vision. Some infants are born with congenital cataracts, and environmental factors may lead to cataract formation. Early symptoms may include strong glare from lights and small light sources at night and reduced visual acuity at low light levels.[4][5]

Couching was the original form of cataract surgery, and was used from antiquity. It is still occasionally found in traditional medicine in parts of Africa and Asia. In 1753, Samuel Sharp performed the first-recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule, equivalent to what became known as intracapsular cataract extraction. The lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision.[1] At the beginning of the 20th century, the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE).[6] In 1949, Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens (IOL), which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient, effective, and comfortable process.[1]

In 1967, Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification, which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision. This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out-patient surgery the standard.[7] In 1985, Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL. Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone, acrylic, and hydrogel foldable lenses, making it possible to reduce the incision width.[6] In 1987, Blumenthal and Moisseiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE.[8] In 1989, M. McFarland introduced a self-sealing incision architecture,[8] and in 2009, Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens, which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction, allowing a smaller, sutureless incision, and requires implantation of a foldable IOL. This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries.[8]

Couching edit

 
"Couching for cataract"; Wellcome Collection illustration of Indian doctors performing couching.

Couching is the earliest-documented form of cataract surgery, and one of the oldest surgical procedures ever performed. In this technique, the lens is dislodged and pushed aside into the vitreous cavity, but not removed from the eye, thus removing the opacity from the visual axis, but also the ability to focus.[9] After being used regularly for centuries, couching has been mostly abandoned in favor of more effective techniques, due to its generally poor outcomes, and is currently only routinely practiced in remote areas of developing countries.[10][11]

Cataract surgery was first mentioned in the Babylonian code of Hammurabi 1750 BCE.[12] The earliest known depiction of cataract surgery is on a statue from the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt (2467–2457 BCE).[12] According to Francisco J Ascaso et al, a "relief painting from tomb number TT 217 in a worker settlement in Deir el-Medina" shows "the man buried in the tomb, Ipuy ... one of the builders of royal tombs in the renowned Valley of the Kings, circa 1279–1213 BC" as he underwent cataract surgery. Although direct evidence for cataract surgery in ancient Egypt is lacking, the indirect evidence, including surgical instruments that could have been used for the procedure, show that it was possible. It is assumed that the couching technique was used.[12][13]

Couching was practiced in ancient India and subsequently introduced to other countries by Indian physician Sushruta (c. 6th century BCE),[14] who described it in his medical text, Sushruta Samhita ("Compendium of Sushruta"); the work's Uttaratantra section[a] describes an operation in which a curved needle was used to push the opaque "phlegmatic matter"[b] in the eye out of the way of vision. The phlegm was then said to be blown out of the nose. The eye would later be soaked with warm, clarified butter before being bandaged.[15] The removal of cataracts by surgery was introduced into China from India, and flourished in the Sui (581–618 CE) and Tang (618–907 CE) dynasties.[16]

The first references to cataract and its treatment in Europe are found in 29 CE in De Medicina, a medical treatise by Latin encyclopedist Aulus Cornelius Celsus, which describes a couching operation.[17] In 2nd century CE, Galen of Pergamon, a prominent Greek physician, surgeon, and philosopher, reportedly performed an operation to remove a cataract-affected lens using a needle-shaped instrument.[18][19] Although many 20th-century historians have claimed that Galen believed the lens to be in the exact centre of the eye, there is evidence that he understood the crystalline lens is located in the anterior aspect of the eye.[20]

The removal of cataracts by couching was a common surgical procedure in Djenné[21] and many other parts of Africa.[22] Couching continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages, and is still used to this day in some parts of Africa and in Yemen.[23][11] However, it has been proven to be an ineffective and dangerous method of cataract therapy, which often leads to blindness or only partially restored vision.[23] The technique has mostly been replaced by extracapsular cataract surgery, including phacoemulsification.[24]

The lens can also be removed by suction through a hollow instrument: bronze oral-suction instruments that seem to have been used for this method of cataract extraction during the 2nd century CE have been unearthed.[25] Such a procedure was described by the 10th-century Persian physician Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, who attributed it to Antyllus, a 2nd-century Greek physician. According to al-Razi, the procedure "required a large incision in the eye, a hollow needle, and an assistant with an extraordinary lung capacity".[26] This suction procedure was also described by Iraqi ophthalmologist Ammar Al-Mawsili in his 10th-century medical text, Choice of Eye Diseases.[26] He presented case histories of its usage, while claiming to have successfully performed it on a number of patients.[26]: p318  Extracting the lens has the benefit of removing the possibility of the lens migrating back into the field of vision.[27] According to oculist Al-Shādhili, a later variant of the cataract needle in 14th-century Egypt used a screw to grip the lens. It is not clear how often, if ever, this method was used; other writers, including Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi and Al-Shadhili, appear to have been unfamiliar with this procedure, or claimed it was ineffective.[26]: p319 

Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries edit

 
Beer-type cataract knife and needle, cased, Paris, 1820-1866
 
A cataract surgery. Dictionnaire Universel de Médecine (1746–1748)

On Sep. 18, 1750, Jacques Daviel performed the first documented planned primary cataract extraction on a cleric in Cologne.[28] In 1753, Samuel Sharp performed the first-recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule: the lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision.[1] In America, cataract couching may have been performed in 1611,[29] while cataract extraction was most likely performed by 1776.[30] Cataract extraction by aspiration of lens material through a tube using suction was performed by Philadelphia-based surgeon Philip Syng Physick in 1815.[31]

King Serfoji II, Bhonsle of Thanjavur, India, reportedly performed cataract surgeries in the early 1800s, according to manuscripts stored in the Saraswathi Mahal Library.[32]

In 1884, Karl Koller became the first surgeon to apply a cocaine solution to the cornea as a local anaesthetic; the news of his discovery spread rapidly, but was not without controversy.[33][34]

Early-to-mid 20th century edit

At the beginning of the 20th century, the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE). The work of Henry Smith, who first developed a safe, fast way to remove the lens within its capsule by external manipulation, was considered particularly influential; the capsule forceps, the discovery of enzymatic zonulysis by Joaquin Barraquer in 1957, and the introduction of cryoextraction of the lens by Tadeusz Krwawicz and Charles Kelman in 1961 continued the development of ICCE.[6] Intracapsular cryoextraction was the favoured form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s: it consisted in using a liquid-nitrogen-cooled probe tip to freeze the encapsulated lens to the probe. This required a large incision and the cornea to be folded back and the anterior chamber to be drained.[9][35][36]

In 1949, Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens (IOL) which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient, effective, and comfortable process.[1]

Artificial IOLs, which are used to replace the eye's natural lens removed during cataract surgery, increased in popularity since the 1960s, and were first approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 1981. The development of IOLs was considered a notable innovation, as patients previously had to wear very thick glasses, or a special type of contact lens, in order to cope with the removal of their natural lens. IOLs can be used to correct other vision problems, such as toric lenses for correcting astigmatism.[37] IOLs can be classified as monofocal, toric, and multifocal lenses.[38]

Ocular anaesthesia has improved since Alfred Einhorn synthesised procaine in 1905, which was used in retrobulbar anaesthesia.

Peribulbar anaesthesia was introduced in 1980 by Mandal and David. Since the turn of the millennium, sub-Tenon's anaesthesia hascome into common use, and by ising a blunt cannula to deliver local anaesthetic, the risk of accidentally puncturing the globe is reduced. The more recent tendency is to administer topical local anesthesia without use of a needle.[9]

Also in the 1960s, the development of A-scan ultrasound biometry contributed to provide more accurate predictions of implant refractive strength.[39]

In 1967, Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification, which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision. This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out-patient surgery the standard. Patients who undergo cataract surgery rarely complain of pain or discomfort during the procedure, although those who have topical anaesthesia, rather than peribulbar block anaesthesia, may experience some discomfort.[7]

Late 20th century edit

Ophthalmic viscosurgical devices (OVDs), which were introduced in 1972, facilitate the procedure and improve overall safety. An OVD is a viscoelastic solution, a gel-like substance used to maintain the shape of the eye at reduced pressure, as well as protect the inside structure and tissues of the eye without interfering with the operation.[1]

In 1980, D.M. Colvard made the cataract incision in the sclera, which limited induced astigmatism.[8] In the early 1980s, Danièle Aron-Rosa and colleagues introduced the neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser (Nd:YAG laser) for posterior capsulotomy.[6] In 1985, Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL. Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone, acrylic, and hydrogel lenses.[6]

According to Cionni et al (2006), Kimiya Shimizu began removing cataracts using topical anaesthesia in the late 1980s,[6] though Davis (2016) attributes the introduction of topical anaesthetics to R.A. Fischman in 1993.[1] In 1987, Blumenthal and Moissiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE. They used a 6.5 to 7 mm (0.26 to 0.28 in) straight scleral tunnel incision 2 mm (0.079 in) behind the limbus with two side ports.[8]

In 1989, M. McFarland introduced a self-sealing incision architecture; in 1990, S.L.Pallin described a chevron-shaped incision that minimized the risk of induced astigmatism; in 1991, J.A. Singer described the frown incision, in which the ends curve away from the limbus, similarly reducing astigmatism.[8] Toric IOLs were introduced in 1992 and are used worldwide to correct corneal astigmatism during cataract surgery;[37][1] they have been approved by the FDA since 1998.[40] Also in the late 1990s, optical biometry based on partial coherence infrared interferometry was introduced: this technique improves visual resolution, offers much greater precision, and is much quicker and more comfortable than ultrasound.[39]

21st century edit

According to surveys of members of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, approximately 2.85 million cataract procedures were performed in the United States throughout 2004, while 2.79 million operations were executed in 2005.[41] In 2009, Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens, called "double-nylon loop", which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction, allowing a smaller, sutureless incision of 4.0 to 5.0 mm (0.16 to 0.20 in), and requires implantation of a foldable IOL. This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries.[8]

As of 2013, medical staffs had access to instruments that use infrared swept-source optical coherence tomography (SS-OCT), a non-invasive, high-speed method that can penetrate dense cataracts and collects thousands of scans per second, with the ultimate goal of generating high-resolution data in 2D or 3D.[39] As of 2021, approximately four million cataract procedures take place annually in the U.S. and nearly 28 million worldwide, a large proportion of which are performed in India; that is about 75,000 procedures per day globally.[42]

Notes edit

  1. ^ chapter 17, verses 55–69
  2. ^ kapha in Sanskrit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Davis, G. (January–February 2016). "The Evolution of Cataract Surgery". Mo. Med. 113 (1). Missouri State Medical Association: 58–62. PMC 6139750. PMID 27039493.
  2. ^ "Chapter 5: Microsurgery and Extracapsular Cataract Extraction" (PDF). rajswasthya.nic.in. pp. 36–44. (PDF) from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  3. ^ "Cataracts". www.nei.nih.gov. National Eye Institute. from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
  4. ^ Basic and clinical science course (2011–2012). Pediatric ophthalmology and Strabismus. American Academy of Ophthalmology. ISBN 978-1615251131.
  5. ^ "Facts About Cataract". September 2009. from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Cionni, Robert J.; Snyder, Michael E.; Osher, Robert H. (2006). "6: Cataract surgery". In Tasman, William (ed.). Duane's Ophthalmology. Vol. 6. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. from the original on 20 February 2023. Retrieved 16 February 2023 – via www.oculist.net.
  7. ^ a b Pandey, Suresh K.; Milverton, E. John; Maloof, Anthony J. (October 2004). "A tribute to Charles David Kelman MD: ophthalmologist, inventor and pioneer of phacoemulsification surgery". Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology. 32 (5): 529–533. doi:10.1111/j.1442-9071.2004.00887.x. ISSN 1442-6404. PMID 15498067. S2CID 25230092.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Singh, K.; Misbah, A.; Saluja, P.; Singh, A.K. (December 2017). "Review of manual small-incision cataract surgery". Indian J Ophthalmol. 65 (12): 1281–1288. doi:10.4103/ijo.IJO_863_17. PMC 5742955. PMID 29208807.
  9. ^ a b c Haripriya, A.; Sonawane, H.; Thulasiraj, R.D. (2017). "Changing techniques in cataract surgery: how have patients benefited?". Community Eye Health. 30 (100): 80–81. PMC 5820631. PMID 29483751.
  10. ^ Isawumi, M.A.; Kolawole, O.U.; Hassan, M.B. (June 2013). "Couching techniques for cataract treatment in Osogbo, South west Nigeria". Ghana Medical Journal. 47 (2): 64–9. PMC 3743109. PMID 23966741.
  11. ^ a b Babalola, O.E. (December 2011). "The peculiar challenges of blindness prevention in Nigeria: a review article". Afr J Med Med Sci. 40 (4): 309–19. PMID 22783680.
  12. ^ a b c Ascaso, F.J.; Lizana, J.; Cristóbal, J.A. (March 2009). "Cataract surgery in ancient Egypt". Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery. 35 (3): 607–608. doi:10.1016/j.jcrs.2008.11.052. PMID 19251160.
  13. ^ Grzybowski, Andrzej; Ascaso, Francisco J. (November 2014). "Indirect evidence of cataract surgery in ancient Egypt". Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery. 40 (11): 1944–1945. doi:10.1016/j.jcrs.2014.09.017. PMID 25442904.
  14. ^ Meulenbeld, G.J. (1999–2002). A History of Indian Medical Literature. Groningen: Forsten.
  15. ^ Sharma, P.V. (2001). Suśruta-Saṃhitā with English translation of text and Ḍalhaṇa's commentary along with critical notes. Vol ĪI (Kalpasthāna and Uttaratantra). Varanasi, India: Chaukhambha Visvabharati Oriental. pp. 202–204.
  16. ^ Deshpande, V. (2000). "Ophthalmic surgery: a chapter in the history of Sino-Indian medical contacts". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 63 (3): 370–388. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00008454. S2CID 162655091. See also Deshpande, V. (1999). "Indian influences on early Chinese ophthalmology: glaucoma as a case study". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 62 (22): 306–322. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00016724. S2CID 162306288.
  17. ^ Aur. Cor. Celsus (1831) [1769]. "Book 7, chapter 7. On the diseases of the eyes, and those which are cured by manual operations". De Medicina [On Medicine]. De medicina.English & Latin. Vol. 2. Translated by Lee, Alex. London: E. Cox. pp. 257–261. from the original on 2023-02-28. Retrieved 2023-02-28. Translated from L.Targa's 1769 edition, includes the original Latin text.
  18. ^ Urabe, H. (September 1976). "[Classification of ringworm infections (author's transl)]". Nihon Hifuka Gakkai Zasshi. The Japanese Journal of Dermatology. 86 (10): 573–581. PMID 1034789.
  19. ^ Magner, L.N. (1992). A History of Medicine. CRC Press. p. 91.
  20. ^ Leffler, C.T.; Hadi, T.M.; Udupa, A.; Schwartz, S.G.; Schwartz, D. (2016). "A medieval fallacy: the crystalline lens in the center of the eye". Clinical Ophthalmology. 10 (10): 649–662. doi:10.2147/OPTH.S100708. PMC 4833360. PMID 27114699.
  21. ^ McKissack, P; McKissack, F. (1995). The Royal Kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhay Life in Medieval Africa. Macmillan. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-8050-4259-7.
  22. ^ Thompson, E.E. (January 1965). "Primitive African Medical Lore and Witchcraft". Bulletin of the Medical Library Association. 53 (1): 80–94. PMC 198231. PMID 14223742.
  23. ^ a b (PDF). EuroTimes. September 2005. p. 11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2009.
  24. ^ "Toric Lens Implants". odpcli.com. Pacific Cataract and Laser Institute. from the original on 2019-10-09. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  25. ^ Bergman WC, Schulz RA, Davis DS (September 2009). "Factors influencing the genesis of neurosurgical technology". Neurosurgical Focus. 27 (3): E3. doi:10.3171/2009.6.FOCUS09117. PMID 19722817.
  26. ^ a b c d Savage-Smith, E. (August 2000). "The practice of surgery in Islamic lands: myth and reality". Social History of Medicine. 13 (2): 307–321. doi:10.1093/shm/13.2.307. PMID 14535259.
  27. ^ Finger, S. (1994). Origins of Neuroscience: A History of Explorations Into Brain Function. Oxford University Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-19-514694-3.
  28. ^ Leffler, CT; Hogewind, B.F. (2023). "Jacques Daviel performed the first documented planned primary cataract extraction on Sep. 18, 1750". Eye. Dec. 6, 2023 (7): 1392–1393. doi:10.1038/s41433-023-02874-5. PMC 11076578. PMID 38057561.
  29. ^ Leffler CT, Wainsztein RD (2016). "The first cataract surgeons in Latin America: 1611-1830". Clinical Ophthalmology. 10: 679–694. doi:10.2147/OPTH.S105825. PMC 4841434. PMID 27143845.
  30. ^ Leffler CT, Schwartz SG, Grzybowski A, Braich PS (2015). "The first cataract surgeons in Anglo-America". Survey of Ophthalmology. 60 (1): 86–92. doi:10.1016/j.survophthal.2014.08.002. PMC 4262555. PMID 25444521.
  31. ^ Leffler, C.T.; Letocha, C.E.; Pierson, K.; Schwartz, S.G. (2017). "Aspiration of cataract in 1815 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania". Digital Journal of Ophthalmology. 23 (4): 4–7. doi:10.5693/djo.01.2017.10.001. PMC 5791631. PMID 29403333.
  32. ^ Badrinath, S.S.; Biswas, J.; Badrinath, Vasanthi (2004-10-10). . The Hindu. Archived from the original on 2005-01-18.
  33. ^ Goerig, M.; Bacon, D; van Zundert, A. (May–June 2012). "Carl Koller, cocaine, and local anesthesia: some less known and forgotten facts". Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine. 37 (3): 318–24. doi:10.1097/AAP.0b013e31825051f3. PMID 22531385. S2CID 205432874.
  34. ^ Altman, A.J.; Albert, D.M.; Fournier, G.A. (January–February 1985). "Cocaine's use in ophthalmology: our 100-year heritage". Survey of Ophthalmology. 29 (4): 300–6. doi:10.1016/0039-6257(85)90154-7. PMID 3885453.
  35. ^ Toczolowski, J. (July 1993). "Thirty years of cryoophthalmology". Ann. Ophthalmol. 25 (7): 254–6. PMID 8363292.
  36. ^ Meadow, Norman B. (15 October 2005). "Cryotherapy: A fall from grace, but not a crash". Ophthalmology Times.
  37. ^ a b Singh, Vivek Mahendrapratap; Ramappa, Muralidhar; Murthy, Somasheila; Rostov, Audrey Talley (January 2022). "Toric intraocular lenses: Expanding indications and preoperative and surgical considerations to improve outcomes". Indian J Ophthalmol. 70 (1): 10–23. doi:10.4103/ijo.IJO_1785_21. PMC 8917572. PMID 34937203.
  38. ^ Moshirfar, Majid; Milner, Dallin; Patel, Bhupendra C. (June 21, 2022). "Cataract Surgery". www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. National Center for Biotechnology Information. PMID 32644679. from the original on 24 February 2023. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  39. ^ a b c Khoramnia, R.; Auffarth, G.; Łabuz, G.; Pettit, G.; Suryakumar, R. (19 January 2022). "Refractive Outcomes after Cataract Surgery". Diagnostics. 12 (2). Basel: 243. doi:10.3390/diagnostics12020243. PMC 8870878. PMID 35204334.
  40. ^ Ramappa, Muralidhar; Singh, Vivek Mahendrapratap; Murthy, SomasheilaI; Rostov, AudreyTalley (2022). "Toric intraocular lenses: Expanding indications and preoperative and surgical considerations to improve outcomes". Indian Journal of Ophthalmology. 70 (1): 10–23. doi:10.4103/ijo.IJO_1785_21. ISSN 0301-4738. PMC 8917572. PMID 34937203.
  41. ^ "American Academy of Ophthalmology News". www.aao.org. 5 April 2006. [permanent dead link]
  42. ^ Lindstrom, Richard L. (10 February 2021). "Future of cataract surgery seems promising". occular surgery news. Healio. from the original on 16 February 2023. Retrieved 15 February 2023.

history, cataract, surgery, cataract, surgery, long, history, europe, asia, africa, most, common, successful, surgical, procedures, worldwide, thanks, improvements, techniques, cataract, removal, developments, intraocular, lens, replacement, technology, implan. Cataract surgery has a long history in Europe Asia and Africa It is one of the most common and successful surgical procedures in worldwide use thanks to improvements in techniques for cataract removal and developments in intraocular lens IOL replacement technology in implantation techniques and in IOL design construction and selection 1 Surgical techniques that have contributed to this success include microsurgery viscoelastics and phacoemulsification 2 Cataract surgery using a temporal approach phacoemulsification probe in right hand and chopper in left hand Cataract surgery is the removal of the natural lens of the eye that has developed a cataract an opaque or cloudy area 3 Over time metabolic changes of the crystalline lens fibres lead to the development of a cataract causing impairment or loss of vision Some infants are born with congenital cataracts and environmental factors may lead to cataract formation Early symptoms may include strong glare from lights and small light sources at night and reduced visual acuity at low light levels 4 5 Couching was the original form of cataract surgery and was used from antiquity It is still occasionally found in traditional medicine in parts of Africa and Asia In 1753 Samuel Sharp performed the first recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule equivalent to what became known as intracapsular cataract extraction The lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision 1 At the beginning of the 20th century the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction ICCE 6 In 1949 Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens IOL which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient effective and comfortable process 1 In 1967 Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out patient surgery the standard 7 In 1985 Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone acrylic and hydrogel foldable lenses making it possible to reduce the incision width 6 In 1987 Blumenthal and Moisseiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE 8 In 1989 M McFarland introduced a self sealing incision architecture 8 and in 2009 Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction allowing a smaller sutureless incision and requires implantation of a foldable IOL This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries 8 Contents 1 Couching 2 Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries 3 Early to mid 20th century 4 Late 20th century 5 21st century 6 Notes 7 ReferencesCouching editMain article Couching ophthalmology nbsp Couching for cataract Wellcome Collection illustration of Indian doctors performing couching Couching is the earliest documented form of cataract surgery and one of the oldest surgical procedures ever performed In this technique the lens is dislodged and pushed aside into the vitreous cavity but not removed from the eye thus removing the opacity from the visual axis but also the ability to focus 9 After being used regularly for centuries couching has been mostly abandoned in favor of more effective techniques due to its generally poor outcomes and is currently only routinely practiced in remote areas of developing countries 10 11 Cataract surgery was first mentioned in the Babylonian code of Hammurabi 1750 BCE 12 The earliest known depiction of cataract surgery is on a statue from the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt 2467 2457 BCE 12 According to Francisco J Ascaso et al a relief painting from tomb number TT 217 in a worker settlement in Deir el Medina shows the man buried in the tomb Ipuy one of the builders of royal tombs in the renowned Valley of the Kings circa 1279 1213 BC as he underwent cataract surgery Although direct evidence for cataract surgery in ancient Egypt is lacking the indirect evidence including surgical instruments that could have been used for the procedure show that it was possible It is assumed that the couching technique was used 12 13 Couching was practiced in ancient India and subsequently introduced to other countries by Indian physician Sushruta c 6th century BCE 14 who described it in his medical text Sushruta Samhita Compendium of Sushruta the work s Uttaratantra section a describes an operation in which a curved needle was used to push the opaque phlegmatic matter b in the eye out of the way of vision The phlegm was then said to be blown out of the nose The eye would later be soaked with warm clarified butter before being bandaged 15 The removal of cataracts by surgery was introduced into China from India and flourished in the Sui 581 618 CE and Tang 618 907 CE dynasties 16 The first references to cataract and its treatment in Europe are found in 29 CE in De Medicina a medical treatise by Latin encyclopedist Aulus Cornelius Celsus which describes a couching operation 17 In 2nd century CE Galen of Pergamon a prominent Greek physician surgeon and philosopher reportedly performed an operation to remove a cataract affected lens using a needle shaped instrument 18 19 Although many 20th century historians have claimed that Galen believed the lens to be in the exact centre of the eye there is evidence that he understood the crystalline lens is located in the anterior aspect of the eye 20 The removal of cataracts by couching was a common surgical procedure in Djenne 21 and many other parts of Africa 22 Couching continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages and is still used to this day in some parts of Africa and in Yemen 23 11 However it has been proven to be an ineffective and dangerous method of cataract therapy which often leads to blindness or only partially restored vision 23 The technique has mostly been replaced by extracapsular cataract surgery including phacoemulsification 24 The lens can also be removed by suction through a hollow instrument bronze oral suction instruments that seem to have been used for this method of cataract extraction during the 2nd century CE have been unearthed 25 Such a procedure was described by the 10th century Persian physician Muhammad ibn Zakariya al Razi who attributed it to Antyllus a 2nd century Greek physician According to al Razi the procedure required a large incision in the eye a hollow needle and an assistant with an extraordinary lung capacity 26 This suction procedure was also described by Iraqi ophthalmologist Ammar Al Mawsili in his 10th century medical text Choice of Eye Diseases 26 He presented case histories of its usage while claiming to have successfully performed it on a number of patients 26 p318 Extracting the lens has the benefit of removing the possibility of the lens migrating back into the field of vision 27 According to oculist Al Shadhili a later variant of the cataract needle in 14th century Egypt used a screw to grip the lens It is not clear how often if ever this method was used other writers including Abu al Qasim al Zahrawi and Al Shadhili appear to have been unfamiliar with this procedure or claimed it was ineffective 26 p319 Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries edit nbsp Beer type cataract knife and needle cased Paris 1820 1866 nbsp A cataract surgery Dictionnaire Universel de Medecine 1746 1748 On Sep 18 1750 Jacques Daviel performed the first documented planned primary cataract extraction on a cleric in Cologne 28 In 1753 Samuel Sharp performed the first recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule the lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision 1 In America cataract couching may have been performed in 1611 29 while cataract extraction was most likely performed by 1776 30 Cataract extraction by aspiration of lens material through a tube using suction was performed by Philadelphia based surgeon Philip Syng Physick in 1815 31 King Serfoji II Bhonsle of Thanjavur India reportedly performed cataract surgeries in the early 1800s according to manuscripts stored in the Saraswathi Mahal Library 32 In 1884 Karl Koller became the first surgeon to apply a cocaine solution to the cornea as a local anaesthetic the news of his discovery spread rapidly but was not without controversy 33 34 Early to mid 20th century editAt the beginning of the 20th century the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction ICCE The work of Henry Smith who first developed a safe fast way to remove the lens within its capsule by external manipulation was considered particularly influential the capsule forceps the discovery of enzymatic zonulysis by Joaquin Barraquer in 1957 and the introduction of cryoextraction of the lens by Tadeusz Krwawicz and Charles Kelman in 1961 continued the development of ICCE 6 Intracapsular cryoextraction was the favoured form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s it consisted in using a liquid nitrogen cooled probe tip to freeze the encapsulated lens to the probe This required a large incision and the cornea to be folded back and the anterior chamber to be drained 9 35 36 In 1949 Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens IOL which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient effective and comfortable process 1 Artificial IOLs which are used to replace the eye s natural lens removed during cataract surgery increased in popularity since the 1960s and were first approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 1981 The development of IOLs was considered a notable innovation as patients previously had to wear very thick glasses or a special type of contact lens in order to cope with the removal of their natural lens IOLs can be used to correct other vision problems such as toric lenses for correcting astigmatism 37 IOLs can be classified as monofocal toric and multifocal lenses 38 Ocular anaesthesia has improved since Alfred Einhorn synthesised procaine in 1905 which was used in retrobulbar anaesthesia Peribulbar anaesthesia was introduced in 1980 by Mandal and David Since the turn of the millennium sub Tenon s anaesthesia hascome into common use and by ising a blunt cannula to deliver local anaesthetic the risk of accidentally puncturing the globe is reduced The more recent tendency is to administer topical local anesthesia without use of a needle 9 Also in the 1960s the development of A scan ultrasound biometry contributed to provide more accurate predictions of implant refractive strength 39 In 1967 Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out patient surgery the standard Patients who undergo cataract surgery rarely complain of pain or discomfort during the procedure although those who have topical anaesthesia rather than peribulbar block anaesthesia may experience some discomfort 7 Late 20th century editOphthalmic viscosurgical devices OVDs which were introduced in 1972 facilitate the procedure and improve overall safety An OVD is a viscoelastic solution a gel like substance used to maintain the shape of the eye at reduced pressure as well as protect the inside structure and tissues of the eye without interfering with the operation 1 In 1980 D M Colvard made the cataract incision in the sclera which limited induced astigmatism 8 In the early 1980s Daniele Aron Rosa and colleagues introduced the neodymium doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser Nd YAG laser for posterior capsulotomy 6 In 1985 Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone acrylic and hydrogel lenses 6 According to Cionni et al 2006 Kimiya Shimizu began removing cataracts using topical anaesthesia in the late 1980s 6 though Davis 2016 attributes the introduction of topical anaesthetics to R A Fischman in 1993 1 In 1987 Blumenthal and Moissiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE They used a 6 5 to 7 mm 0 26 to 0 28 in straight scleral tunnel incision 2 mm 0 079 in behind the limbus with two side ports 8 In 1989 M McFarland introduced a self sealing incision architecture in 1990 S L Pallin described a chevron shaped incision that minimized the risk of induced astigmatism in 1991 J A Singer described the frown incision in which the ends curve away from the limbus similarly reducing astigmatism 8 Toric IOLs were introduced in 1992 and are used worldwide to correct corneal astigmatism during cataract surgery 37 1 they have been approved by the FDA since 1998 40 Also in the late 1990s optical biometry based on partial coherence infrared interferometry was introduced this technique improves visual resolution offers much greater precision and is much quicker and more comfortable than ultrasound 39 21st century editAccording to surveys of members of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery approximately 2 85 million cataract procedures were performed in the United States throughout 2004 while 2 79 million operations were executed in 2005 41 In 2009 Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens called double nylon loop which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction allowing a smaller sutureless incision of 4 0 to 5 0 mm 0 16 to 0 20 in and requires implantation of a foldable IOL This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries 8 As of 2013 medical staffs had access to instruments that use infrared swept source optical coherence tomography SS OCT a non invasive high speed method that can penetrate dense cataracts and collects thousands of scans per second with the ultimate goal of generating high resolution data in 2D or 3D 39 As of 2021 approximately four million cataract procedures take place annually in the U S and nearly 28 million worldwide a large proportion of which are performed in India that is about 75 000 procedures per day globally 42 Notes edit chapter 17 verses 55 69 kapha in SanskritReferences edit a b c d e f g h Davis G January February 2016 The Evolution of Cataract Surgery Mo Med 113 1 Missouri State Medical Association 58 62 PMC 6139750 PMID 27039493 Chapter 5 Microsurgery and Extracapsular Cataract Extraction PDF rajswasthya nic in pp 36 44 Archived PDF from the original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 12 February 2023 Cataracts www nei nih gov National Eye Institute Archived from the original on 2 May 2019 Retrieved 27 July 2020 Basic and clinical science course 2011 2012 Pediatric ophthalmology and Strabismus American Academy of Ophthalmology ISBN 978 1615251131 Facts About Cataract September 2009 Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2015 a b c d e f Cionni Robert J Snyder Michael E Osher Robert H 2006 6 Cataract surgery In Tasman William ed Duane s Ophthalmology Vol 6 Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins Archived from the original on 20 February 2023 Retrieved 16 February 2023 via www oculist net a b Pandey Suresh K Milverton E John Maloof Anthony J October 2004 A tribute to Charles David Kelman MD ophthalmologist inventor and pioneer of phacoemulsification surgery Clinical amp Experimental Ophthalmology 32 5 529 533 doi 10 1111 j 1442 9071 2004 00887 x ISSN 1442 6404 PMID 15498067 S2CID 25230092 a b c d e f g Singh K Misbah A Saluja P Singh A K December 2017 Review of manual small incision cataract surgery Indian J Ophthalmol 65 12 1281 1288 doi 10 4103 ijo IJO 863 17 PMC 5742955 PMID 29208807 a b c Haripriya A Sonawane H Thulasiraj R D 2017 Changing techniques in cataract surgery how have patients benefited Community Eye Health 30 100 80 81 PMC 5820631 PMID 29483751 Isawumi M A Kolawole O U Hassan M B June 2013 Couching techniques for cataract treatment in Osogbo South west Nigeria Ghana Medical Journal 47 2 64 9 PMC 3743109 PMID 23966741 a b Babalola O E December 2011 The peculiar challenges of blindness prevention in Nigeria a review article Afr J Med Med Sci 40 4 309 19 PMID 22783680 a b c Ascaso F J Lizana J Cristobal J A March 2009 Cataract surgery in ancient Egypt Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery 35 3 607 608 doi 10 1016 j jcrs 2008 11 052 PMID 19251160 Grzybowski Andrzej Ascaso Francisco J November 2014 Indirect evidence of cataract surgery in ancient Egypt Journal of Cataract amp Refractive Surgery 40 11 1944 1945 doi 10 1016 j jcrs 2014 09 017 PMID 25442904 Meulenbeld G J 1999 2002 A History of Indian Medical Literature Groningen Forsten Sharma P V 2001 Susruta Saṃhita with English translation of text and Ḍalhaṇa s commentary along with critical notes Vol iI Kalpasthana and Uttaratantra Varanasi India Chaukhambha Visvabharati Oriental pp 202 204 Deshpande V 2000 Ophthalmic surgery a chapter in the history of Sino Indian medical contacts Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 63 3 370 388 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00008454 S2CID 162655091 See also Deshpande V 1999 Indian influences on early Chinese ophthalmology glaucoma as a case study Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 62 22 306 322 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00016724 S2CID 162306288 Aur Cor Celsus 1831 1769 Book 7 chapter 7 On the diseases of the eyes and those which are cured by manual operations De Medicina On Medicine De medicina English amp Latin Vol 2 Translated by Lee Alex London E Cox pp 257 261 Archived from the original on 2023 02 28 Retrieved 2023 02 28 Translated from L Targa s 1769 edition includes the original Latin text Urabe H September 1976 Classification of ringworm infections author s transl Nihon Hifuka Gakkai Zasshi The Japanese Journal of Dermatology 86 10 573 581 PMID 1034789 Magner L N 1992 A History of Medicine CRC Press p 91 Leffler C T Hadi T M Udupa A Schwartz S G Schwartz D 2016 A medieval fallacy the crystalline lens in the center of the eye Clinical Ophthalmology 10 10 649 662 doi 10 2147 OPTH S100708 PMC 4833360 PMID 27114699 McKissack P McKissack F 1995 The Royal Kingdoms of Ghana Mali and Songhay Life in Medieval Africa Macmillan p 104 ISBN 978 0 8050 4259 7 Thompson E E January 1965 Primitive African Medical Lore and Witchcraft Bulletin of the Medical Library Association 53 1 80 94 PMC 198231 PMID 14223742 a b Couching for cataracts remains a persistent problem in Yemen PDF EuroTimes September 2005 p 11 Archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2009 Toric Lens Implants odpcli com Pacific Cataract and Laser Institute Archived from the original on 2019 10 09 Retrieved 2019 10 09 Bergman WC Schulz RA Davis DS September 2009 Factors influencing the genesis of neurosurgical technology Neurosurgical Focus 27 3 E3 doi 10 3171 2009 6 FOCUS09117 PMID 19722817 a b c d Savage Smith E August 2000 The practice of surgery in Islamic lands myth and reality Social History of Medicine 13 2 307 321 doi 10 1093 shm 13 2 307 PMID 14535259 Finger S 1994 Origins of Neuroscience A History of Explorations Into Brain Function Oxford University Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 19 514694 3 Leffler CT Hogewind B F 2023 Jacques Daviel performed the first documented planned primary cataract extraction on Sep 18 1750 Eye Dec 6 2023 7 1392 1393 doi 10 1038 s41433 023 02874 5 PMC 11076578 PMID 38057561 Leffler CT Wainsztein RD 2016 The first cataract surgeons in Latin America 1611 1830 Clinical Ophthalmology 10 679 694 doi 10 2147 OPTH S105825 PMC 4841434 PMID 27143845 Leffler CT Schwartz SG Grzybowski A Braich PS 2015 The first cataract surgeons in Anglo America Survey of Ophthalmology 60 1 86 92 doi 10 1016 j survophthal 2014 08 002 PMC 4262555 PMID 25444521 Leffler C T Letocha C E Pierson K Schwartz S G 2017 Aspiration of cataract in 1815 in Philadelphia Pennsylvania Digital Journal of Ophthalmology 23 4 4 7 doi 10 5693 djo 01 2017 10 001 PMC 5791631 PMID 29403333 Badrinath S S Biswas J Badrinath Vasanthi 2004 10 10 Prince of Ophthalmology The Hindu Archived from the original on 2005 01 18 Goerig M Bacon D van Zundert A May June 2012 Carl Koller cocaine and local anesthesia some less known and forgotten facts Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 37 3 318 24 doi 10 1097 AAP 0b013e31825051f3 PMID 22531385 S2CID 205432874 Altman A J Albert D M Fournier G A January February 1985 Cocaine s use in ophthalmology our 100 year heritage Survey of Ophthalmology 29 4 300 6 doi 10 1016 0039 6257 85 90154 7 PMID 3885453 Toczolowski J July 1993 Thirty years of cryoophthalmology Ann Ophthalmol 25 7 254 6 PMID 8363292 Meadow Norman B 15 October 2005 Cryotherapy A fall from grace but not a crash Ophthalmology Times a b Singh Vivek Mahendrapratap Ramappa Muralidhar Murthy Somasheila Rostov Audrey Talley January 2022 Toric intraocular lenses Expanding indications and preoperative and surgical considerations to improve outcomes Indian J Ophthalmol 70 1 10 23 doi 10 4103 ijo IJO 1785 21 PMC 8917572 PMID 34937203 Moshirfar Majid Milner Dallin Patel Bhupendra C June 21 2022 Cataract Surgery www ncbi nlm nih gov National Center for Biotechnology Information PMID 32644679 Archived from the original on 24 February 2023 Retrieved 8 February 2023 a b c Khoramnia R Auffarth G Labuz G Pettit G Suryakumar R 19 January 2022 Refractive Outcomes after Cataract Surgery Diagnostics 12 2 Basel 243 doi 10 3390 diagnostics12020243 PMC 8870878 PMID 35204334 Ramappa Muralidhar Singh Vivek Mahendrapratap Murthy SomasheilaI Rostov AudreyTalley 2022 Toric intraocular lenses Expanding indications and preoperative and surgical considerations to improve outcomes Indian Journal of Ophthalmology 70 1 10 23 doi 10 4103 ijo IJO 1785 21 ISSN 0301 4738 PMC 8917572 PMID 34937203 American Academy of Ophthalmology News www aao org 5 April 2006 permanent dead link Lindstrom Richard L 10 February 2021 Future of cataract surgery seems promising occular surgery news Healio Archived from the original on 16 February 2023 Retrieved 15 February 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of cataract surgery amp oldid 1224245290, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.