AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL
ReZoom™
Astigmatism Treatment
Toric IOLs for Astigmatism
AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOLFinally, the opportunity for freedom from reading glasses and bifocals.
Until recently, life without reading glasses or bifocals was not an option for most cataract patients. You now have an option. The AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL Intraocular lens (IOL), which is an artificial lens that is implanted in the eye to replace the eye's clouded crystalline lens during cataract surgery, is a unique technological innovation that can provide you with quality vision throughout the entire visual spectrum - near through distance - with increased independence from reading glasses or bifocals!
For most cataract patients, life without reading glasses or bifocals is something they either experienced before presbyopia or they just dreamed about for most of their lives. But today, the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL is turning those dreams into reality with its revolutionary lens technology, which is designed to allow patients to see clearly at all distances without bifocals or reading glasses.
The AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL is now available and delivers a high level of glasses-free vision for cataract patients.
In the clinical study, 80% of patients receiving the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL reported that they never wear glasses for any activities. With the AcrySof® ReSTOR®IOL they can read a book, work on the computer, and drive a car - day or night - and play golf or tennis with an increased freedom from glasses. In fact, patients were so pleased with their vision, nearly 94% of patients said they would have the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL implanted again, if given the choice.
Eye Care Specialists and Dr. Harvey Reiser were selected as one of only 16 surgeons an sites in the United States to participate in the Clinical Research leading to the FDA Approval of the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL. Eye Care Specialists is one of the leading Ophthalmololgy Practices on the East Coast implanting the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL . See our press release in the What's New Section.
As we perform daily activities such as reading, watching television or working at the computer, our eyes are constantly focusing on objects at varying distances – up close, far away and everything in-between. The ability to quickly change focus throughout this range of vision is called accommodation. Accommodation is the ability of the eye's lens to change shape to focus on objects at various distances. Unfortunately, this ability diminishes as we grow older, causing us to become dependent on bifocals or reading glasses. However, the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL was designed to provide quality near to distance vision by combining the strengths of apodized diffractive and refractive technologies. Similar technology has been used for years in microscopes and telescopes to improve image quality, and has now been patented for use in intraocular lenses by Alcon.
Apodization is the gradual tapering of the diffractive steps from the center to the outside edge of a lens to create a smooth transition of light between the distance, intermediate and near focal points. Diffraction involves the bending or spreading of light to multiple focal points as it passes through the lens. On the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL, the center of the lens surface consists of an apodized diffractive optic. This means that the series of tiny steps in that center area work together to focus light for near through distance vision. (Distance vision: Refers to focal points that are typically 7 feet or further from your eyes. Items that typically fall within the distance range of vision are billboards, street signs, and movie screens).
Refraction involves the redirection of light passing through the lens, to focus on the Retina. The refractive region of the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL bends light as it passes through the lens to a focal point on the retina. This outer ring of the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL surrounds the apodized diffractive region and is dedicated to focusing light for distance vision.
Cataract Surgery or Clear Lens Extraction are performed on an outpatient basis, and usually requires just a few hours of your time from start to finish. Your eye will be treated with anesthetic prior to the procedure so you'll feel little, if any, discomfort. First, a tiny incision will be made in the eye allowing your surgeon to use a small instrument (about the size of a pen tip) to break up or wash away the cloudy cataract. Once the cataract is removed, the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL will be inserted through the same tiny incision and set into its permanent position.
After the procedure you'll rest for a short while before you go home. Your doctor will typically examine your eye within 24 hours. You'll need to use prescription eye drops to guard against infection and help your eye heal. For a few days, you may need to wear a protective shield, especially at night to prevent you from rubbing your eye. Everyone heals somewhat differently, but most patients see well enough to return to most of their routine activities the day after surgery. Once both eyes have been treated, you will fully appreciate the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL and realize that your cataract was one thing you could definitely live without.
Finally, quality vision and true freedom from glasses for 80% of patients
During the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL clinical studies, patients experienced lifestyle enhancement through quality vision, and greater freedom from reading glasses and bifocals. In fact, according to the AcrySof® ReSTOR® clinical studies, four out of five patients with the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL reported never wearing glasses following cataract surgery in both eyes, compared to only 1 out of 10 patients with monofocal lenses. This is the highest level of freedom from glasses ever demonstrated in an IOL clinical trial.
Additionally, the AcrySof® ReSTOR® clinical studies indicated that nearly 94% of the study subjects were so satisfied with their new quality vision that they would have the AcrySof® ReSTOR® IOL implanted again.


ReZoom™ intraocular lens is a second-generation refractive multifocal IOL that provides hyperopic cataract patients with greater independence from glasses than monofocal IOLs. The ReZoom™ proprietary multifocal design provides a range of vision that monofocals cannot match.
The ReZoom™ Balanced View Optics™ technology distributes light over five optic zones so that each lens has a distance-dominant central zone for distance vision in bright light conditions when the pupil is constricted.
Clinical Studies show that 92% of those receiving the ReZoom Lens "never" or "only occasionally" need to wear glasses after their surgery.
Unlike conventional single-vision (monofocal) lens implants, state-of-the-art ReZoom™ lenses have been specially designed with multifocal zones that provide good vision across the spectrum of varying distances and light conditions. So you can see well anywhere and anytime, be it near, far or in between. Patients no longer have to settle for monofocal lenses that only provide good distance vision with limited ability to see objects that are near without glasses.
The ReZoom™ Multifocal Lens is a clear, foldable implant made of a high-refractive-index acrylic material. This new technology multifocal lens is designed to provide a full range of vision - near, distance and intermediate - after cataract treatment.
If you are diagnosed with cataracts and are experiencing one or more of the following symptoms, you may be a candidate for the ReZoom™ Multifocal Lens:
The ReZoom™ Multifocal Lens procedure is an advanced treatment for cataracts that helps most people see near, far and everything in between without depending on glasses all the time.
Today, cataract removal is generally performed as an outpatient procedure under local or topical anesthesia. You will be fully awake, but you will be comfortable and feel no pain. Typically, you will be asked to arrive an hour or so prior to your procedure, and you will be allowed to leave after a period of observation following your procedure. The procedure usually takes 10 to 20 minutes.
To remove your cataract (clouded lens), your doctor will use a technique called phacoemulsification (phaco). Your doctor will make a tiny, 1/8-inch incision and insert a small phaco probe. The probe will break apart the clouded lens and remove it. Next, an IOL will be inserted through the same tiny incision, into the lens capsule of your eye. Because this procedure is performed through an incision that is very small, your eye will be able to heal rapidly with little or no discomfort.
Following the procedure, you will be allowed to return home within an hour or so. Vision is restored immediately in most cases; however, vision usually continues to improve in the weeks following the procedure. Keep in mind that lens implants have been in use for about 40 years to treat cataracts. Over 14.2 million cataract and lens implant procedures are now performed each year worldwide.
Astigmatic Keratotomy (AK) and Limbal Relaxing Incision (LRI) are the procedures that treat astigmatism. Surgeons make microscopic incision over the corneal surface. These incisions are made in the steepest part of the cornea, allowing it to relax and become more round. AK and LRI are often performed in combination with other refractive procedures and cataract surgery because astigmatism frequently accompanies nearsightedness or farsightedness. If you have significant astigmatism, your vision is somewhat blurry all the time.
AK or LRI combined with cataract surgery can improve a patient's chances of excellent uncorrected postoperative vision. For many surgeons, it is already part of their routine surgery. Patients with more than a diopter of topographical astigmatism should be considered for AK or LRI at the time of their cataract surgery. Use of AK or LRI becomes more important when using multifocal intraocular lenses (IOLs) because good simultaneous uncorrected distance and near vision can be obtained only with a nearly spherical cornea.
Astigmatism occurs when the cornea is curved unevenly. Often there is more curvature in one direction than in the other. With astigmatism, light rays that normally focus in one point on the retina (light-sensitive tissue at the back of the eye) have no single point of focus. This causes images to appear blurry and distorted.
During AK and LRI the surgeon usually makes two microscopic incisions in the cornea. These allow the cornea to flatten and become more evenly rounded. Then light rays focus more normally inside the eye, so your vision is clearer.
These eye surgeries are done under a local anesthesia and the entire procedure lasts a maximum of 10 minutes for both eyes. It involves making one or two incisions at the steepest part of the cornea. This causes the cornea's football-shape, which is causing the astigmatism, to relax into a rounded shape.
Your eye may be sensitive to light for a few hours or feel like there is a foreign object in it. Your doctor will prescribe eye drops for you that will help prevent infection and inflammation, and reduce the feeling that you have a foreign object in your eye.
While a reduction in the astigmatism is often observable by the day after surgery, it generally takes a few weeks before the results stabilize. In cases of severe astigmatism - which can be reduced by astigmatic keratotomy eye surgery but not eliminated -- new eyeglasses will be prescribed a month after surgery.
Toric IOLs are designed to correct astigmatism. This provides another new option for Cataract Patients! The ACRYSOF® Toric IOLs are artificial lenses implanted in the eye to restore vision after a clouded natural lens (cataract) is removed. The unique design of the AcrySof® Toric Lens makes it possible to reduce or eliminate corneal astigmatism and significantly improve uncorrected distance vision .
The lens of the IOL is convex on both sides (biconvex) and made of a soft plastic that can be folded prior to insertion, allowing placement through an incision smaller than the optic diameter of the lens. After surgical insertion into the eye, the lens gently unfolds to restore vision. The supporting arms (haptics) provide for proper positioning of the IOL within the eye.
Most surgeons who treat astigmatism in their cataract patients tend to use astigmatic keratotomy (AK) pr limbal relaxing incisions (LRI) which involves making incisions in the cornea.
The ACRYSOF® Toric IOLs can also be used in adult patients with corneal astigmatism during cataract removal. The ACRYSOF Toric IOLs have been shown in a clinical study to provide good uncorrected distance in patients who have undergone cataract surgery and required reduction of corneal astigmatism.
The FDA approved the AcrySof Toric IOL by Alcon in September 2005.