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Procedure | Price Range | |
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Cataract Eye Surgery Cost Average | $975 - $2,700 | Free Quote |
Facility | City | Type |
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Saint Lukes South Surgery Center | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Truman Medical Center Hospital Hill | Kansas City | Acute Care Hospital |
Surgicenter of Johnson County | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Eye Surgery Center - the Cliffs | Independence | Eye Surgery Center |
South Kansas City Surgicenter | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Cass Regional Medical Center | Harrisonville | Critical Access (Rural) Hospital |
Ku Medwest Ambulatory Surgery Center | Shawnee | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Providence Medical Center | Kansas City | Acute Care Hospital |
Deer Creek Surgery Center | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Overland Park Surgery Center | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Eye Surgery Center Northland | Kansas City | Eye Surgery Center |
Bates County Memorial Hospital | Butler | Acute Care Hospital |
Lafayette Regional Health Center | Lexington | Critical Access (Rural) Hospital |
Research Medical Center - Brookside Campus | Kansas City | Medical Center |
Novamed Eye Surgery Center (plaza) | Kansas City | Eye Surgery Center |
Saint Lukes North Hospital | Smithville | Acute Care Hospital |
St Joseph Medical Center | Kansas City | Acute Care Hospital |
Surgery Center at Liberty Hospital | Liberty | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
University of Kansas Hospital | Kansas City | Acute Care Hospital |
Liberty Cataract Center | Liberty | Eye Surgery Center |
Miami County Medical Center | Paola | Acute Care Hospital |
Ads Healthcare Ads Ambulatory Surgery Center | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
College Park Family Care Center, Ambulatory Surgical Center | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Blue Ridge Surgical Center | Kansas City | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Research Medical Center | Kansas City | Acute Care Hospital |
Excelsior Springs Hospital | Excelsior Springs | Critical Access (Rural) Hospital |
Physicians' Surgery Center | Prairie Village | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Saint John Hospital | Leavenworth | Acute Care Hospital |
Overland Park Surgery Center | Overland Park | Eye Surgery Center |
Saint Luke's Surgicenter - Lee's Summit | Lees Summit | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Briarcliff Surgery Center | Kansas City | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
St Mary's Surgical Center Independence | Blue Springs | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Heart of America Surgery Center | Kansas City | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Park Place Surgery Center | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
University Health Lakewood Medical Center | Kansas City | Acute Care Hospital |
Northland Eye Surgery Center | Liberty | Eye Surgery Center |
Surgery Center of Olathe | Olathe | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Ray County Memorial Hospital | Richmond | Critical Access (Rural) Hospital |
Ambulatory Surgery Center of Kc | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Discover Vision Surgery and Laser Center | Leawood | Eye Surgery Center |
New Liberty Hospital District | Liberty | Acute Care Hospital |
Adventhealth Ottawa | Ottawa | Acute Care Hospital |
Centerpoint Ambulatory Surgery Center | Independence | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Saint Luke's East Hospital | Lee's Summit | Acute Care Hospital |
Surgery Center of Leawood | Leawood | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Surgery Center of Blue Valley | Overland Park | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Cushing Memorial Hospital | Leavenworth | Acute Care Hospital |
Liberty Ambulatory Surgery Center | Liberty | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Surgicenter of Kansas City | Kansas City | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Creekwood Surgery Center | Kansas City | Ambulatory Surgical Center |
Cataract Surgery Introduction
Cataract surgery is one of the most common operations performed on an outpatient basis and one of the safest and most effective. Surgery involves removing the cloudy lens and replacing it with a substitute lens. If cataracts are present in both eyes, they cannot be removed at the same time. Your physician will need to perform surgery on each eye separately. This procedure is usually performed in less than 30 minutes and usually requires only minimal sedation and numbing eye drops, no stitches to close the wound, and no eye patch after surgery. There are no medications, dietary supplements, exercises, or optical devices that have been shown to prevent or cure symptomatic cataracts. Changes in diet and watchful waiting is the most common advice for non-symptomatic cataracts. There are two major types of ECCE: manual expression, in which the lens is removed through an incision made in the cornea or the sclera of the eye; and phacoemulsification, in which the lens is broken into fragments inside the capsule by ultrasound energy and removed by aspiration. The particular method and type of replacement lens will be determined by your physician.
Cataract Surgery Patient Preparation
A brief physical exam will be performed. Inform your physician of any medications you are routinely taking. You will need to have special testing known as keratometry to determine the strength of the IOL needed. Other specific instructions will be provided usually limiting eating or drinking. It is very important to follow these instructions. Arrangements should be made for transportation after the surgery is complete.
What to expect during and after Cataract Surgery
Most cataract surgery takes less than an hour and is done with minimal anesthesia and numbing drops. After the area around the eye has been cleansed with antiseptic, sterile drops are used to cover most of the patient's face. The patient is given either a local anesthetic to numb the tissues around the eye or a topical anesthetic to numb the eye itself. An eyelid holder is used to hold the eye open during the procedure. If the patient is very nervous, the doctor may administer a sedative intravenously. After the anesthetic has taken effect, a very small incision is made, the lens is removed and the IOL is inserted and placed in the correct position. During this time you may notice the sensation of pressure from the various instruments used during the procedure.
After leaving the operating room, you will be brought to a recovery room where your doctor will prescribe several eye drops that you will need to take for a few weeks postoperatively and provide specific care instructions. While you may notice some discomfort, most patients do not experience significant pain following surgery; if you do you experience decreasing vision or significant pain, you should contact your ophthalmologist immediately. In some cases, within months to years after surgery, the thin lens capsule may become cloudy, and you may have the sensation that the cataract is returning because your vision is becoming blurry again. This process is termed posterior capsule opacification, or a "secondary cataract." To restore vision, a laser is used in the office to painlessly create a hole in the cloudy bag. This procedure takes only a few minutes in the office, and vision usually improves rapidly. The lens prescription should be checked after surgery, as it is likely to need adjustment.
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