Are There Side Effects?
Depending on pupil size, the multifocal IOL patient may experience some halos, or rings around lights at night. These halos are different from and less problematic than those typically caused by cataracts. Fortunately, these halos become less noticeable and distracting over time as the brain learns to selectively ignore them through a process called neuroadaptation.
This is the same process that allows us to ignore background noise such as traffic sounds or an air conditioning fan. How quickly these adjustments are made by the brain varies for different individuals. Experience has shown that neuroadaptation is a gradual process that occurs over several months.
Halos are often quite noticeable during the first 24 hours after surgery when the pupil is still dilated from medication.
Do not be alarmed or misled by this temporary situation. Compared to their predecessors, the current generation multifocal IOLs have been engineered to significantly reduce the halo effect.
Will I Need Additional Procedures to Achieve the Best Result?
Much like contact lenses or glasses, a multifocal IOL comes in more than 60 different “powers”. As with prescription eyeglasses or contact lenses, it is important to match the appropriate IOL power to your eye.
When prescribing eyeglasses or contact lenses, we utilize trial and error to preview different lens powers to determine which one you see best with (“Which one is better, one or two?”).
However, because the multifocal IOL is implanted inside the eye, and only after your natural lens (cataract) has been removed, it is impossible for you to “preview” various IOL powers prior to surgery.
Furthermore, once it is implanted we cannot as easily exchange the IOL as we could with glasses or contact lenses. Fortunately, an appropriate IOL power can be estimated using advanced mathematical formulas based on pre-operative measurements of your eye’s dimensions.
Although these formulas are quite accurate in most patients, there are individual variables that prevent this process from being 100% perfect. In particular, individuals who are extremely nearsighted, farsighted, or have high amounts of astigmatism, and patients who have had previous refractive surgery (e.g. RK, PRK, LASIK), are more likely to end up with an IOL power that is not optimal because the mathematical formulas are based on average sized eyes, not extremes or eyes that have had previous surgery.
Multifocal IOLs are high performance devices and, accordingly, require precisely tuned optics. If the IOL power is not optimal, the multifocal IOL will not perform as well as desired. In these situations, a patient may discover the vision is adequate for most tasks and that wearing a very thin pair of glasses helps them out in certain situations (e.g. night driving).
Alternatively, an additional procedure, such as LASIK or PRK, can be performed to optimize the outcome. There is a 15 to 20% chance that a secondary procedure like LASIK will be necessary to fine tune the spectacle free vision.
Please refer to the FAQs about Multifocal IOLs to learn more specifics.
Alternatives to Multifocal IOLs
The alternative to a multifocal lens would be a monofocal IOL or an accommodative IOL. A patient who chooses a monofocal (conventional single vision) IOL must be aware that glasses for near vision will be necessary. To reduce dependence on glasses for near vision tasks, monovision correction with monofocal IOLs is also an option.
Monovision correction is a technique that makes use of the fact we have two eyes. In this technique, one eye is set for distance vision while the other is set for near vision. After an adjustment period which usually lasts several weeks, the brain neuroadapts to this new optical arrangement, allowing the patient to see far and near seamlessly.
This monovision arrangement is often used in patients who wear contact lenses full time and who are over the age of 45. Monovision may not be the best choice for all patients.