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Yag Surgery Complications
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Advances in ND : YAG Laser Surgery $312.98 No Synopsis Available |
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Neodymium : YAG Laser in Medicine and Surgery $82.88 No Synopsis Available |
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Complications in Surgery $205.72 No Synopsis Available |
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Management of Complications in Refractive Surgery $239.98 This illustrated guide is written by international opinion leaders with extensive experience in the practice of refractive surgery. It is the first book devoted to refractive complications (with practical hints and case reports on outcomes) to provide ophthalmic surgeons with the most adequate solutions for the most frequent problems. All complications are described and lavishly illustrated. The book provides ophthalmic surgeons with the most adequate solutions for the most frequent problems they face in their daily practice. Author: Alio, Jorge L./ Azar, Dimitri T. Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 361 Publication Date: 2008/04/16 Language: English Dimensions: 11.10 x 8.40 x 0.90 inches |
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Complications in Cardiothoracic Surgery (Hardcover) $335.35 Drs. Little and Merrill draw on their expertise in general thoracic and cardiac surgery to review tracheobronchial operations, lung volume reduction operations, lung transplantation, minimally invasive esophagectomy, pleural operations, revascularizations, myocardial operations, and aortic and great vessel operations. For each operation, leading practitioners provide specific advice on what to be aware of to prevent complications -- and how to manage them if they do occur. |
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Complications in Surgery (Mixed media product) $408.71 "Complications in Surgery is organized to cover both the broad concepts of surgical care and the complications relevant to operations on specific organs. Surgical epidemiology, operative technique, and disease pathophysiology are each essential in contemporary surgical practice; each is emphasized in this new textbook"--Provided by publisher. |
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Complications in Ophthalmic Plastic Surgery (Paperback) $307.62 This multi-contributed text intends to fill a void in ophthalmic literature by looking into eyelid and lacrimal surgery complications and their respective treatments. A broad range of ophthalmologists, including residents and general ophthalmologists, will benefit from the direct and concise coverage of the most commonly encountered procedures. Key concepts and examples of complications & treatment, coupled with numerous color illustrations, will present the materials clearly to the reader. The text addresses complications and presents ways to identify, correct, manage and prevent unfavorable results. |
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Surgical Complications (Hardcover) $159.06 A comprehensive review of small animal surgical complications for the general veterinary practitioner! Topics on complications will include: upper urinary tract surgery, lower urinary tract surgery, GI surgery, hepato-biliary surgery, spay/neuter surgery, reconstructive surgery, thoracic surgery, airway surgery, minimally invasive surgery, metabolic complications of endocrine surgery, ear surgery, surgical site infections, and more! |
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Strabismus Surgery and Its Complications [With DVD] $481.47 This comprehensive atlas and textbook on strabismus surgery and its complications provides complete stepbystep instruction for the surgical management of the strabismus patient. In Part 1, detailed descriptions, photographs, and diagrams illustrate each major surgical procedure and variations. Part 2 presents an extensive review of surgical complications including their prevention, recognition, and treatment. The text is lavishly illustrated with artwork and photographic examples, and wellsupported by sample references. Author: Coats, David K./ Olitsky, Scott E. Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 318 Accessory: DVD Publication Date: 2007/06/11 Language: English Dimensions: 11.10 x 8.50 x 0.90 inches |
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Management of Complications in Ophthalmic Surgery $136.64 No Synopsis Available |
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Complications in Ocular Surgery (Hardcover) $243.42 Description not available. |
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Complications in Laser Cutaneous Surgery $181.58 No Synopsis Available |
Floaters after LASIK- Warning!
Few cataract complications and their treatments
A posterior capsule opacity (PCO) is the most common among those few cataract surgery complications, including eye inflammation, infections and a dislocated IOL. The reason for a PCO comes from the lens capsule, which will be maintained during a surgery. About 20% of patients have haziness on their intact posterior capsules, so that even if the lens has been replaced with a successful IOL, the vision is still blurry. A PCO is not a “secondary cataract”. Cataracts will never recur once removed.
A PCO can be treated with a YAG laser capsulotomy, which takes a few minutes and is safe, effective and painless. During the procedure, your doctor will remove the hazy posterior capsule with a laser, eliminating any incision. Patients can resume normal activities immediately after the surgery, with the help of anti-inflammation eye drops. Only 1% of patients may suffer from a detached retina from a YAG laser capsulotomy.
Another complication for a cataract surgery can be mal-positioned IOL, which may lead to double vision or severe visual acuity decrease. There are two underlying reasons that may cause dislocated IOLs: broken capsule bag and dislocated capsule bag. Since the IOL is placed within the extremely thin capsule bag, a broken bag due to accidents may lead to dislocated IOL. The other reason comes from a dislocated capsule bag, which will surely lead to dislocated IOL.
Dislocated IOLs can also result from operational mistakes during the IOL positioning process. Once an IOL dislocation is found, a second procedure to reposition the lens will be taken soon. With proper treatment, dislocated IOLs won’t bring permanent vision problems.
Although the most severe complication may lead to vision loss, complication-free cataract surgeries account for 98% of the total. Other potential complications include minor eye inflammation, retinal detachment, retinal or corneal swelling, eye pressure increase and droopy eyelid. You should always tell your doctor about your floaters, light flashes and curtain-like vision loss, in order to receive immediate treatments.
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