ESCRS - 2,800 years of cataract surgery ;
ESCRS - 2,800 years of cataract surgery ;

2,800 years of cataract surgery

The earliest known account of cataract surgery dates to about 800 BCE in India, where Shushruta described a procedure similar to recent extracapsular extraction.

2,800 years of cataract surgery
Howard Larkin
Howard Larkin
Published: Friday, November 17, 2017
Manus C Kraff MD honors cataract surgery pioneers at AAO 2017 in New Orleans The earliest known account of cataract surgery dates to about 800 BCE in India, where Shushruta described a procedure similar to recent extracapsular extraction. With help from the patient blowing through one nostril, lens material is expelled through a scleral incision made with a needle. On the 50th anniversary of phacoemulsification, it served as a reminder of the long, rich history of cataract surgery, presenters told the American Academy of Ophthalmology 2017 in New Orleans. For hundreds of years couching was the dominant procedure for hundreds of years. Then, in 1752, the advent of intracapsular cataract extraction by de la Faye launched a 100 year march toward modern cataract surgery, said Daniel M Albert MD, Casey Eye Institute, Portland, Oregon, USA. Other milestones were Sharp’s cataract knife and extracapsular extraction in 1753, and founding of the Vienna School of Ophthalmology in 1773. With the development of the linear incision by von Graefe and corneal suture by Williams in 1866, followed by anesthesia and antiseptic procedure, extraction won out in developed countries. Manus C Kraff MD, Chicago, USA, reflected on his experience, from his first manual extraction in 1959 to femtosecond laser assisted surgery today. He reviewed the evolution of intracapsular and extracapsular approaches, honoring innovators including Hermenegildo and Barraquers along the way. Jack M Dodick MD, NYU School of Medicine, added his personal recollections of Charles Kelman MD and the invention of phaco – including his attempt to view the first procedure through a shuttered office window where it was conducted in secret on a Saturday morning in 1967. “Few people have the ingenuity to imagine a better way of doing things when the current way seems good enough. Even fewer have the drive to make it happen. Because Charlie did, he changed ophthalmology and the world forever,” Dr Dodick said. Kelman’s innovation paved the way for minimally invasive surgery throughout the human body, he concluded.  
Tags: AAO 2017
Latest Articles
Glaucoma Treatment Under Pressure

New techniques and technologies add to surgeons’ difficult decisions

Read more...

Outside the Box, Inside the Pipeline

Researchers are tackling glaucoma diagnosis and treatment from all sides.

Read more...

The EHDS Is Ready for the Green Light

If proposal is approved, Europe could see better access to, and exchange and use of, health data.

Read more...

ESCRS to Release Guidelines for Cataract and Refractive Surgery

Comprehensive approach to the safest and most effective modern surgery.

Read more...

Barry Fellowship Opens Up ‘Whole New Field of Thought’

The 2022 recipient combines theoretical and practical to learn new treatments.

Read more...

Digitalising the OR—Experience and Perspectives

Benefits include saving time and improving outcomes.

Read more...

ESCRS Heritage Programme

Visionaries past and present.

Read more...

Dynamic Measures Needed for Quality of Vision

Functional visual acuity testing and straylight metering may better reflect real-world conditions.

Read more...

What Is Stopping Digital OR Adoption?

Ophthalmologists know the benefits—now it’s time to construct the right plan.

Read more...

Time to Move Beyond Monofocal IOLs?

European surgeons appear hesitant to first offer other presbyopia-correcting options to patients.

Read more...

;