New Product News from Gulden Ophthalmics
Gulden
Ophthalmics introduces another Time Saving Tool
Press Contact: Tom Cockley
Gulden’s Blur Tolerance Tester Swiftly and Easily Helps Increase the Likelihood of Patient Satisfaction with Monovision Correction.
ELKINS PARK, PA – Gulden’s
handheld Siepser Blur Tolerance Tester can greatly assist eye-care
professionals in preoperatively screening and evaluating a patient’s
tolerance to different levels of monovision. As eye-care professionals know,
completely eliminating the need for eyeglasses is a sought after benefit of
cataract and refractive surgery for presbyopic patients. With the popularity
of multifocal and accommodating intraocular lenses, Gulden’s Blur Tolerance
Tester saves time and makes testing convenient by combining the ability to
test for distance, near blur tolerance and reading abilities with different
amounts of monovision.
Practitioners accustomed to using a
selection of loose lenses, which can get scattered in the examining room, will
appreciate the convenience and professional appearance of the patient-friendly
Gulden instrument.
This handheld tester is simple to use,
transportable from one examining area to another, and its straight-forward
protocol makes it extremely effective for use by the professional staff and
technicians in the office to determine how successful monovision will be for a
patient.
The first step in the testing procedure is
to determine which eye is the patient’s dominant eye – easily accomplished
with Gulden’s Eye Dominance Tester. Once the dominant eye is established,
the built-in occluder for the dominant eye is opened and the rotating low-add
lenses disk, positioned in front of the non-dominant eye, is used to dial in
the amount of correction the patient needs – either 0.75, 1.00 or 1.25 to
read Jaeger 2 comfortably. With the patient looking in the distance with the
dominant eye, and with the lowest level of add that a patient can tolerate
dialed in, the patient will not realize that they are "blurred" in
front of their non-dominant eye. The effect, termed "summation,"
relates to the ability of the mind and eyes to work together to additively see
objects that with one eye alone would appear blurred. By measuring and using
this effect with the Siepser Blur Tolerance Tester, the eye-care professional
can identify excellent candidates for CK and LASIK and determine the lowest
level of monovision correction that will be effective, increasing the
likelihood of patient satisfaction.
###
For more information, contact Gulden
Ophthalmics, 225 Cadwalader Avenue, Elkins Park, PA 19027-2020 Tel
215-884-8105 Fax 215-884-0418
www.guldenindustries.com
email: info@guldenindustries.com
|