Prosthetic Eye (Ocular Prosthesis): Surgery, Care, Types

109 7
Prosthetic Eye (Ocular Prosthesis): Surgery, Care, Types A prosthetic eye can help improve the appearance of people who have lost an eye to injury or disease. It's commonly called a "glass eye" or "fake eye."

The prosthetic eye includes:

Recommended Related to Eye Health



Natural Vision Correction: Does It Work?

Exercising your body makes it stronger. So can exercising your eyes make your vision stronger, too? Unfortunately, there is no evidence that eye exercises improve vision. Your need for glasses is based on the shape of your eye, the size of your pupil, and the ability to shift focus, which declines as we age.Still, like many alternative remedies, natural vision correction has supporters among some practitioners of holistic medicine and their patients. If you are looking into natural vision correction,...

Read the Natural Vision Correction: Does It Work? article > >
  • oval, whitish outer shell finished to duplicate the white color of the other eye
  • round, central portion painted to look like the iris and pupil of the other eye

Implanting a prosthetic eye (ocular prosthesis) is almost always recommended after an eye is surgically removed due to damage or disease.

Some of the reasons why an eye may be removed are:
  • injury
  • glaucoma
  • infection inside the eye
  • eye tumors

Types of Surgery


There are two surgical methods for removing a damaged eye. The type of surgery you have will affect the selection of a prosthetic eye. The two methods are:

Evisceration. In this method, the jelly-like inside of the eye is suctioned out. This is done through an incision in the front of the eye. But the procedure preserves tissues in the:
  • outer eye
  • eye socket (orbit)

Enucleation. In this method, the entire eye (the globe-like "eyeball") is cut away and removed from the eye socket.

Your doctor will decide which method to use based on:
  • type of eye condition you have
  • degree of damage to the eye

Why Is a Prosthetic Eye Used?


A prosthetic eye can improve the appearance of the affected eye socket. For most people it is vastly preferable to wearing an eye patch or bandage.

If the entire eye is removed, an ocular implant and prosthesis prevent the tissues in the eye socket from growing to fill the empty space.

A prosthetic eye cannot restore vision. After removal of the natural eye and placement of a prosthetic eye, a person will have no vision in that eye.

What Is a Prosthetic Eye Made of?


At one time a "glass eye" was really made of glass. Today, a prosthetic eye is generally made of hard, plastic acrylic. The prosthetic eye is shaped like a shell.

The prosthetic eye fits over an ocular implant. The ocular implant is a separate hard, rounded device that is surgically and permanently embedded deeper in the eye socket.

An ocular implant is often wrapped with living tissue or a synthetic cushioning material before placement.
Source...
Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up here to get the latest news, updates and special offers delivered directly to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe at any time

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.