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Even the most experienced cataract surgeon can encounter stressful situations in the operating room.

Produktbeschreibung
Even the most experienced cataract surgeon can encounter stressful situations in the operating room.
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Autorenporträt
Amar Agarwal, MS, FRCS, FRCOphth, is the pioneer of phakonit, which is phaco with needle incision technology. This technique became popularized as bimanual phaco, microincision cataract surgery (MICS), or microphaco. He was the first to remove cataracts through a 0.7-mm tip with the technique called microphakonit. He also discovered no-anesthesia cataract surgery and FAVIT, a new technique to remove dropped nuclei. This technique is now called sleeveless phaco tip-assisted levitation (SPAL). The air pump, which was a simple idea of using a fish aquarium pump to increase the fluid into the eye in bimanual phaco and co-axial phaco, has helped prevent surge. This built the basis of various techniques of forced infusion like active fluidics for small incision cataract surgery. He also discovered a new refractive error called aberropia. He was also the first to do a combined surgery of microphakonit (700-micron cataract surgery) with a 25-gauge vitrectomy in the same patient, thus having the smallest incisions possible for cataract and vitrectomy. He was the first surgeon to implant a new mirror telescopic IOL (Lipshitz macular implant) for patients suffering from age-related macular degeneration. He was the first in the world to implant a glued IOL. In this, a PC-IOL is fixed in an eye without any capsules using fibrin glue. The Malyugin ring for small pupil cataract surgery was also modified by him as the Agarwal modification of the Malyugin ring for miotic pupil cataract surgery with posterior capsular defects. Dr. Agarwal's Eye Hospital also did the first anterior segment transplantation in a 4-month-old child with anterior staphyloma. Dr. Agarwal has brought out the technique of IOL scaffold, in which a 3-piece IOL is injected into an eye between the iris and the nucleus to prevent the nucleus from falling down in posterior capsule ruptures. He has combined glued IOL and IOL scaffold in cases of posterior capsule rupture where there is no iris or capsular support and termed the technique glued IOL scaffold. Dr. Agarwal's Eye Hospital also did a glued endocapsular ring in cases of subluxated cataract for the first time. Pre-Descemet's endothelial keratoplasty (PDEK) was initiated by Dr. Agarwal. In this, the pre-Descemet's layer and the Descemet's membrane with endothelium are transplanted en bloc in patients with diseased endothelium. Dr. Agarwal's Eye Hospital first did contact lens-assisted collagen cross-linking (CACXL), a new technique for cross-linking thin corneas, and they have also worked on E-PDEK, in which an endoilluminator is used to assist in PDEK surgeries. Dr. Agarwal designed the new instrument called the trocar anterior chamber maintainer, now in complicated cases, which helps give infusion through the anterior chamber and works like a trocar cannula. He also started a new technique of iris suturing called single-pass four-throw (SFT) pupilloplasty. This is used for closed-angle glaucoma and for mydriatic cases. He was the principal investigator for the Bausch & Lomb study in the first human eyes using hypersonic vitrectomy with Vitesse. The first 20 surgeries of posterior vitrectomy were done at Dr. Agarwal's Eye Hospital. He was also the first in the world to use hypersonic vitrectomy with the Vitesse for a case of posterior capsule rupture with nuclear fragments. He did an anterior vitrectomy, posterior vitrectomy, and nuclear fragment removal with the same Vitesse 23-gauge probe. Dr. Agarwal has performed more than 150 live surgeries at various conferences. His videos have won many awards at the film festivals of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, American Academy of Ophthalmology, and European Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons. He has also written more than 75 books, which have been published in various languages (English, Spanish, and Polish). In his center, he trains doctors from all over the world on phaco, glued IOL, LASIK, and retinal surgeries. He is the chairman and managing director of Dr. Agarwal's Group of Eye Hospitals, which has 75 eye hospitals across 14 countries all over the world. He can be contacted at dragarwal@vsnl.com. The website of the hospital is http://www.dragarwal.com.