Posts Tagged ‘#cataractsurgery’

Schulze Surgery Center Celebrates Its 20 Year Anniversary!

We are happy to announce that February, 2017 marks our 20th consecutive year of operation.  In the 1990’s, Dr. Schulze Jr & Sr recognized  the need for a venue for affordable, convenient, and high quality surgery for our cataract and refractive surgery patients.  

Prior to that time, all eye surgeries were performed in the hospital, and while quality was good, the size and bureaucracy of the hospitals did not lend themselves to efficiency, and costs to the patient were roughly double (and, in some documented cases, up to ten times as high) what was spent on facility fees in the ambulatory surgery center setting.  Although Dr. Schulze, Sr. had long wanted to build a surgery center, Georgia state law prevented him from doing so, mainly because the powerful hospital lobby was against any competition for their services.  After all, they had a government sponsored monopoly on surgery, and could essentially charge whatever they wanted for their services.

But the laws changed in the mid ’90’s, and Dr. Schulze, Jr and Sr teamed up to build the first outpatient surgery center specializing in eye surgery in coastal Georgia.  Construction took place in 1996, and we opened our doors for our first surgeries in 1997.  Since that time, we’ve had the opportunity to serve tens of thousands of #cataract and #LASIK patients, saving our patient base millions of dollars in the process as compared to what they would have spent in the hospital setting.  More importantly, however, we have been able to provide first class care to an entire generation of patients, and we look forward to carrying on these traditions of quality and innovation for generations to come.

 

What is LASIK?

LASIK is an acronym for “laser assisted in situ keratomileusis.”  The procedure uses the excimer laser to reshape the cornea so as to correct your nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism.  With LASIK, the laser reshapes the cornea underneath a corneal flap (think of the flap as being like a trap door on the surface of the cornea) allowing  for quicker healing with less pain.  In fact, most of our LASIK patients are back to their normal activities the day after surgery.

Our practice began performing LASIK back in 1997.  Not everyone is a candidate for LASIK, but for those who aren’t, we also perform other refractive procedures such as the ICL and Refractive Lens Exchange 

What is a Cataract?

A cataract (from the latin word for “waterfall”) is simply a cloudy lens.  You can imagine how a cloudy lens would block light that needs to go through your eye in order to see.  What we do with #cataract surgery is quite simple:  we take out the cloudy lens and replace it with a clear one.  For obvious reasons, you see better through a clear lens than you do through a cloudy one.

Here’s where this gets interesting:  understand that when we remove the cloudy lens and replace it with a clear one, we can insert any power lens that we want!  Because the techniques for measuring the eye prior to surgery have become so sophisticated, we can now plan our surgery so that nearly all of our patients have less dependence on glasses and contacts, and some patients can even eliminate glasses and contacts entirely.

Take a look at the cataract section on our website here to learn more, and check back for future posts in this blog as we discuss nuances of cataract surgery.

Dr. Ridley’s Gift to the World: The little known story behind the development of the intraocular lens

Here’s a little eye surgery trivia for you. This canopy from a British Spitfire fighter plane gave Sir Harold Ridley the idea for the intraocular lens. A fighter pilot in the Second World War was shot down and a fragment of the canopy entered his eye.

Normally, the eye rejects any foreign body with a violent inflammatory immune response. In the case of the fighter pilot, however, the eye remained quiet. Dr Ridley realized he could make clear lenses out of the same material of the canopy and implant these lenses in the eyes of patients who had their natural lens removed with cataract surgery.

Thus was born the intraocular lens (IOL) and, thanks to Dr Ridley’s amazing insight, tens of millions of patients who would otherwise be blind have had their vision restored.  Sadly, Dr. Ridley was vilified by the medical establishment during most of his career, and it wasn’t until near the end of his life that his contributions were appreciated.  

LASIK and PRK Enhancements after Cataract Surgery

If further LASIK or PRK is necessary for any of our Custom Cataract Surgery patients, Dr. Schulze will waive his professional fees. Thus, if you should require PRK or LASIK after Custom Cataract Surgery to fine tune your vision, you will only be responsible for the facility fee to the surgery center that covers the operating expenses for the excimer laser, which amounts to a 50% discount of our standard combined fees for LASIK and PRK. For those patients who choose to have Basic Cataract Surgery, understand that additional refractive procedures are NOT covered and are your financial responsibility.

Remember that all of the options presented above represent efforts to reduce your dependence upon glasses and contact lenses. None of these options can guarantee you to throw your glasses away. Talk with us about which of these options might be best for you.

728 E. 67th Street,
Savannah, GA 31405
Phone: (912) 352-3120