Dr William Boothe

By drwilliamboothe52

DR. WILLIAM A. BOOTHE

Intraocular lens – An artificial lens which is implanted in the eye to replace the natural crystalline lens. Intraocular lenses are used to treat cataracts and presbyopia. Traditionally they were monofocal, so that you needed glasses for either close-up vision or distance vision. Newer ones are multifocal, with different areas designed for different distances, or can accommodate in a way similar to how the natural lens accommodates for distance.

DALLAS LASIK – Dr William A. Boothe

Corneal Flap – A small circular piece of the cornea’s surface layer (epithelium) which is cut, all but one section like a hinge, and folded back before the laser treats the stroma. After treatment, it’s folded back into position and heals by itself in a few days. Very occasionally there are complications with this flap. For example, it may have been sized wrongly, or cut too deeply, it might be completely cut instead of retaining a hinge, or it might heal in the wrong position, with a slight wrinkle or with swelling. Many of these complications can be dealt with successfully.

DR WILLIAM BOOTHE – LASIK

DR. WILLIAM BOOTHE – LASIK: Ophthalmoscope – (ahf-THAL-muh-skohp) A hand-held instrument with a light, used to examine the eye. It was first devised in 1915 by William Noah Allyn and Frederick Welch, who also founded the company Welch Allyn, which today manufactures many medical diagnostic and therapeutic devices.

Optical Zone – That area of the eye where light passes through from the pupil to the retina. Light passes through the cornea, then the aqueous humor behind it, then the crystalline lens and the vitreous humor behind the lens, to the retina.
Dr. William A. Boothe
DR WILLIAM A. BOOTHE – EYE SURGERY
DR. BOOTHE A.

Ciliary Body – Part of the eye which is in front of the lens, and behind the iris and cornea. It consists of (a) the ciliary muscle which controls the shape of the lens, making it flatter for far distant objects and more convex for closer things; and (b) the ciliary processes, tiny projects which secrete aqueous humor.

Co-management – Collaboration between two or more doctors in caring for a patient. For refractive surgery, usually an optometrist co-manages with an ophthalmologist. The optometrist provides the pre-operative testing and post-operative care, while the ophthalmologist does the surgery itself.

DR WILLIAM A. BOOTHE
DR. WILLIAM BOOTHE – DALLAS: Unfortunately, laser eye surgery doesn’t work for everybody and not everyone who has the surgery performed has the same results. How does laser eye surgery work is the best question you can ask your specialist as it will show that you truly care about your vision and that you’re not going to trust your eyesight to just anyone.
People with cataracts can also benefit from laser surgery for the eyes. Through a specific procedure called phacoemulsification, the cataract is broken into smaller pieces. Afterwards, the pieces are suctioned off via a small cut. Minor problems can be in the form of hazy film or blurred vision which can easily be corrected. After the cataract is removed, it does not return.
Laser surgery for eyes has a good number of benefits. Surgery can be done in the doctor’s office with the patient leaving for home as soon as the procedure is complete. Some laser surgery for eyes can take as little as 20 minutes to complete. They are virtually painless and some only describe minor stinging during the procedure

Dr. William Boothe
Visual Acuity is simply the clearness of vision or the ability to distinguish details and shapes or objects.

Vitreous Humor is the transparent, colorless mass of gel that lies behind the lens and in front of the retina and fills the center of the eyeball.

LASIK EYE – Dr William A. Boothe

Refractive Surgery – A surgery that permanently changes the focusing ability of the eye, done to improve or eliminate refractive errors. It could be either lens surgery such as RLE or P-IOL, or corneal surgery such as LASIK, PRK, Intacs or CK. The lens and the cornea are the two focusing structures in the eye.

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