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The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Raindrop Near Vision Inlay implanted in bilateral pseudophakes with presbyopia for improvement of near and intermediate vision. The ReVision Optics corneal inlay is a 2.0-mm, 30-micron inlay made of a hydrogel material, implanted under a lasik flap. Subjects must require reading add from +1.50 D to +2.50 D. Subjects must have a preoperative manifest refraction spherical equivalent of -0.50 to +1.00 D with no more than 0.75 D of refractive cylinder. The Raindrop Near Vision Inlay will be implanted in the non-dominant eye.
Full description
Presbyopia is a natural outcome of pseudophakic subjects with monofocal or toric intraocular lenses. Treatment of pseudophakic presbyopia generally consists of reading glasses, contact lenses, or monovision LASIK, which allows the patient to see near objects. All these options suffer limitations from the patient perspective. For example, reading glasses can easily be lost or not conveniently available. Multifocal contact lenses suffer from visual symptoms and instability due to potential rotation and movement of the contact lenses on the surface of the cornea. And, successful monovision is generally limited to patients with a history of successful use of contact lenses for monovision, and even in these eyes, monovision is associated with a substantial decrease in stereo acuity and contrast sensitivity.
ReVision Optics has developed the Raindrop Near Vision Inlay for the correction of near and intermediate vision. The inlay is the same refractive index as the human cornea. The inlay is placed in the non-dominant eye, centered over the pupil after a corneal flap (LASIK) has been made. The Raindrop Near Vision Inlay is expected to provide low induction of visual symptoms and improvement of near and intermediate vision in emmetropic subjects with presbyopia. This technology may also demonstrate potential clinical utility in bilateral pseudophakic subjects.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Subjects with anterior chamber IOLs, or posterior chamber, accommodating, or multifocal intraocular lenses (IOLs) in either eye.
Subjects with anterior segment pathology in either eye.
Subjects who have worn soft or rigid contact lenses within the past 30 days in the eye to be treated.
Subjects with residual, recurrent, active ocular or uncontrolled eyelid disease (e.g., meibomian gland dysfunction), or any corneal abnormality (including endothelial dystrophy, guttata, recurrent corneal erosion, etc.) in either eye.
Subjects with ophthalmoscopic signs of keratoconus (or keratoconus suspect) in either eye.
Subjects with distorted or unclear corneal mires on topography maps of the non- dominant eye.
Subjects who require canthotomy to generate a corneal flap in the non-dominant eye.
Subjects with macular degeneration, retinal detachment, or any other fundus pathology that would prevent an acceptable visual outcome in either eye.
Subjects who have undergone previous corneal surgery including LASIK surgery in the non-dominant eye.
Subjects with a history of herpes zoster or herpes simplex keratitis.
Subjects who have a history of steroid-responsive rise in intraocular pressure, preoperative IOP > 21 mm Hg, glaucoma, or are a glaucoma suspect in either eye.
Subjects with a history of uncontrolled diabetes, autoimmune disease connective tissue disease, or clinically significant atopic syndrome.
Subjects on chronic systemic corticosteroids or other immunosuppressive therapy that may affect wound healing, and any immunocompromised subjects.
Subjects who are using ophthalmic medication(s) other than artificial tears for treatment of any ocular pathology excluding ocular allergy.
Subjects using systemic medications with significant ocular side effects.
Subjects with known sensitivity to planned study concomitant medications.
Subjects who are participating in any other clinical trial during the course of this clinical investigation.
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13 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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