Cataracts
Frequently Asked Questions:
What is cataract?
Who is affected by cataracts?
How are cataracts treated?
Where can I get help?
What is cataract?
A cataract is a clouding of the eye’s clear lens. This prevents the passage of light into the eye needed for vision. Cataracts start out small and have little effect on vision at first. But as the cataract grows, it clouds more of the lens. Symptoms include painless blurring of vision, double vision in one eye, fading or yellowing of colors and sensitivity to light and glare.
Who is affected by cataracts?
Cataracts are very common. Approximately 20.5 million Americans age 40 and older have cataracts. However, anyone at any age can develop a cataract. The most common cause of cataract in people under 40 is eye trauma.
More than half of all Americans develop cataracts by age 80. Cataracts are a significant cause of blindness in some parts of the world, but technological advances and the availability of new procedures in the United States mean that for most Americans, cataracts don't lead to vision loss.
How are cataracts treated?
New advances and techniques have made cataract surgery one of the most successful and life-improving surgical procedures. Cataract surgery is the most frequently performed surgical procedure in the United States, with more than 1.5 million procedures performed each year. Cataract surgery is usually covered by medical insurance, including Medicare. Cataract surgery is usually done as an outpatient procedure under local anesthesia. In this procedure, the ophthalmologist makes a tiny incision through which he or she removes the cloudy lens and replaces it with a permanent artificial lens.
Lasers are not currently used to remove cataracts. But they are sometimes used after cataract surgery to remove a film that can grow on the lens implant.
Where can I get help?
The following specialists at Mason Eye Institute provide cataract services:
John W. Cowden, MD
Mason Eye Institute
One Hospital Dr.
Columbia, MO 65212
Eye Institute East
404 Portland Street
Columbia, MO 65201
Office: (573) 882-1029
Appointments: (573) 882-1506
Joseph Giangiacomo, MD
Mason Eye Institute
One Hospital Dr.
Columbia, MO 65212
Office: (573) 882-1028
Appointments: (573) 882-1506
Dan Schoenleber, MD
Mason Eye Institute
One Hospital Dr.
Columbia, MO 65212
Office: (573) 882-1029
Appointments: (573) 882-1506
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Timothy D. McGarity, MD
Mason Eye Institute
One Hospital Dr.
Columbia, MO 65212
Office: (573) 882-1028
Appointments: (573) 882-1506
Moberly Eye Institute
715 N. Morley
Moberly, MO 65270
Appointments: (660) 263-5363 or (573) 882-1028
Frank G. Rieger, III, MD
Mason Eye Institute
One Hospital Dr.
Columbia, MO 65212
Eye Institute East
404 Portland St.
Columbia, MO 65201
Cooper County Memorial Hospital
17651 Hwy. B
Boonville, MO 65233
Office: (573) 882-8470
Appointments: (573) 882-1506
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Our capable ophthalmogists have almost 90 years of combined experience.