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REFRACTIVE LENS EXCHANGE aka RLE/NLR +IOLs

  • Anne Moore

Replied by Anne Moore on topic Refractive Lens Surgery

Posted 22 Jan 2016 15:53 #111
Hi Sasha
I would like your advice on the best way to proceed with my complaint.
I had replacement lens surgery in April 2013, and until recently - apart from the halos around the lights - I was delighted with the results. However, lately I have been having difficulty reading.
I visited Optical Express for a check up and was advised that I need YAG laser surgery and to go back in February for a further consultation, or before if my distance vision also started to fail. This really worried me as if that happened I would be blind!!
The consultant advised that I would have to pay £395.00 per eye to have YAG procedure performed at Optical Express.
Or I can have it done on the NHS!
I was outraged and upset to learn that they want to charge me for a procedure which was never mentioned in my initial consultations, that I have now researched and discovered is a common side effect of lens replacement surgery, for which I paid over £4,600 originally.
I cannot afford further expense and would appreciate your help.
Anne
________________________
admin: Please send your phone number info@opticalexpressruinedmylife.co.uk
:kiss:
Last Edit:23 Jan 2016 17:34 by Anne Moore
  • Evelyn Benham

Replied by Evelyn Benham on topic URGENT CALL!

Posted 19 Jan 2016 10:43 #112
I had surgery on 21st and 28th September 2014 with disastrous results.

I had Mplus X 3.0 put in which resulted in only close vision for a few feet other vision is blurred and not clear.

I cannot carry on life in this state.
Last Edit:19 Jan 2016 21:04 by Evelyn Benham
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Replied by admin on topic URGENT CALL!

Posted 13 Jan 2016 12:06 #113
If you had lens replacement surgery at OE between January 2014 and now, and have experienced problems with your vision as a result, PLEASE contact me with your phone number asap!
info@opticalexpressruinedmylife.co.uk :kiss:
by admin
  • Your opinion

Replied by Your opinion on topic To Al Faretta...

Posted 08 Jan 2016 19:36 #114
Quite frankly I doubt anyone on this site is interested in your opinion, particularly as it’s based on lies! You're just trying to undermine this site and Sasha’s hard work.

You have no idea the problems we face every day - or maybe you do! How many of your ‘customers' return to you with poor vision after surgery-Dry eyes, floaters, halos and many more problems?

Oh no sorry - you don't work for OE, you just wanted some advice.

Go away you disgusting little man :angry:
Last Edit:09 Jan 2016 14:37 by Your opinion
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Replied by admin on topic Re Al Faretta...

Posted 08 Jan 2016 19:00 #115
If you haven't been following this thread please scroll down and read my post dated 6 Dec 2015 to understand the history of 'Al Far(r)etta'.

admin wrote:

Al Faretta wrote: I am a potential Multifocal lens patient as is my wife who has an early cataract… my wife has to have her eyes sorted by early next year if she wants to continue to drive.


I’d guessed ‘Al’ was an OE optom or surgeon given the content of his posts (some unapproved by me), and the fact that his various IP addresses matched the locations of OE stores across England and Ireland.

I still believe he is an OE surgeon - but happy to be proved wrong if you show me evidence 'Al'... confidentiality guaranteed even for you!

After challenging 'Al' he sent me this message on 14 December:
"What do you want to know about me? I am a self employed Optometrist who works as a Locum. I prefer to remain anonymous obviously. You should be interested only in my opinions, unrelated to anything else."



Perhaps someone else would like to explain to this troll why none of us are - or "should be" - interested in his opinions!

I have more important things to deal with thanks to people like him :kiss:
Last Edit:09 Jan 2016 14:11 by admin
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  • Bobby2
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Replied by Bobby2 on topic Refractive Lens Exchange (RLE/NLR)

Posted 08 Dec 2015 16:25 #116
After my appalling outcome from Optical Express' MPlus lenses, I wrote to Oculentis to enquire why my vision was so much poorer than OE had informed me it would be post surgery; extremely blurred vision, all the light disturbances and vision equal to looking through a 30 year old dirty shed window.
Interestingly they wrote back to say how good the MPlus lenses were/are and the need for lens explantation was unusual, however the rate they quoted for this was higher than OE quoted me (post surgery).

During my many months off work post surgery, due to said surgery (failure) I spent hours researching and said to OE's Steven Hannan that I have found out that if you have had multifocal IOL implants you cannot hold a flying license. I told him whilst I don't intend to hold a flying license, pilots are not the only profession who require a good level of vision, he told me my information was incorrect.

I beg to differ, "Multifocal IOLs are not acceptable":
www.caa.co.uk/default.aspx/default.aspx?...etype=90&pageid=9245
Last Edit:27 Apr 2022 06:10 by Bobby2
  • Michael Clayton

Replied by Michael Clayton on topic Multifocal lenses and why you shouldn't.

Posted 08 Dec 2015 15:47 #117
Hi again,

Just a little update, I was with one of the best gas permeable contact lens practices in London if not the world from 1994 through till September this year where now living in Germany and 3.75 years post Oculentis Mplus 1.5 implants and 2.75 years post left capsulotomy and the right eye lasek I am now plugged into the specialists at Heidelberg trying to get the advanced Swiss sclerals to work as my London experts after one year were defeated by the distance between us. The sclerals are meant to bandage the corneas which have been measured as having a 0.5sec right eye tear-breakup time (TBUT) and 4s left. Anything below 6secs is regarded as severe. This is due to both sets of surgery and some dry eye before surgery after nearly 30 years of gas permeable lens wear starting in 1986. The thing is, despite having worn a variety of semi-scleral lenses for my -10/-11 myopia including near vision, middle vision, distance vision and multi-focal, when it came to the assessment in January 2012 at the Moorfields private clinic, the optometrist dismissed ideas of a monofocal implant as unsuitable even though of course, I cannot read nor use the computer without reading glasses thus defeating the object of the Occulentis multifocal. The only activity where having multifocal helps is packing my parachute between jumps. I should have had a monofocal in each eye set for driving so the contrast in reading would be excellent. The thing is I was not given any time to make up my mind at the assessment and relied on their expertise. As I was flying back to Spain where I lived, I said ok, go with these mplus lenses. The consequences were nearly 3 years without a job, living off savings. Seriously, I do not lie. These lenses should never be used in anyone unless very old and even then I doubt it. I could go on as my history is literally more than that you find on Wikipaedia.
by Michael Clayton
  • Carl G
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Replied by Carl G on topic Refractive Lens Exchange (RLE)

Posted 08 Dec 2015 12:31 #118

sight conscious wrote: ...should Multifocal lenses be banned till a test is invented?


Interesting comments.

Should MFIOLs be banned completely? To be honest, probably not, but that said they are still taking a gamble. The NHS apparently do not deal with MFIOLs at all, and will only implant monofocals (Sasha will correct me if I'm wrong about this). Also in the US the regulatory agencies (FDA in this instance) are far more sceptical about new multifocal products. (As an aside, having had dealings with the US FTC in the past, whilst their system for regulation is not perfect it seems considerably better than ours). There is still a significant chance that a patient in their 70s or 80s with advanced cataracts would still have a better outcome with monofocals and glasses than with multifocals. What percentage chance is this? As I think I've pointed out, no-one actually knows.

The CE mark issue is an interesting example of the lack of transparency within the industry. Have the Notified Bodies in Germany taken care to ensure the lens is safe to implant? I have every confidence that they have. Have they taken the necessary steps to ensure the lens is effective with a particular range of patients, and what is that particular range of patients (you wouldn't implant these in a myopic teenager, right?) Don't know. As a UK citizen making the request the Notified Body is not required to even acknowledge receipt of my emails.

Regulation is a surgical issue, and having seen recents posts from Sasha here I am both stunned and flabbergasted that surgeons within the industry are apparently not required to adhere to the Royal College of Ophthalmologists guidelines. So... Whose guidelines are they required to adhere to then? And who has the ultimate responsibility for defining what category of patient is acceptable for multifocal lenses?

In my case the decision as to whether I was suitable for surgery was made by an optometrist, not an ophthalmic surgeon. My surgeon did not meet me until 10 minutes prior to surgery and even then did not examine me except to rubber stamp my consent form and check my eyes were sufficiently dilated. He didn't know me from the guy next door.

As to market forces though; the medical industry does not behave in exactly the same way as other markets. It's true that market forces apply, but because of the high level of concealment within the industry (look at recent newspaper articles on disclosure of clinical trials) (and in fairness the usually cautious rate of development of new products) (I have pharma clients) those market effects appear more slowly. But no, you can't rely on market forces for regulation in medicine.
Last Edit:08 Dec 2015 16:01 by Carl G
  • sight conscious

Replied by sight conscious on topic Refractive Lens Exchange (RLE)

Posted 08 Dec 2015 07:24 #119
Been on this site for a while. A few comments. Would welcome your opinions.

1. if there are no real reliable tests to demonstrate vision after Multifocal surgery patients, should Multifocal lenses be banned till a test is invented?
2. Can the UK do anything unilaterally because if Europe licenses these lenses can we prevent its sale and use
3. What regulations, more than are currently in place, would make a real difference - reliably.
4. Can those regulations be applicable to all prostheses. Remember the PIP Breast implants had the CE mark.

Ultimately, if any technology is so faulty so as to affect a 'majority' of patients negatively, would it not have been abandoned already due to market forces when people would just not opt for it.
Last Edit:08 Dec 2015 11:10 by sight conscious
  • Carl G
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Replied by Carl G on topic Refractive Lens Exchange (RLE)

Posted 07 Dec 2015 12:00 #120

Anon wrote: In the interests of disclosure:
1) I am in the business of ophthalmology and refractive surgery... You would not have been in this position if it had not been for BUPA. The Financial ombudsman does not understand this issue of medical responsibility, however if you challenge the Ombudsman and ask them whether BUPA are appropriately qualified medically to redirect, they will have to ask for an expert or a body like the GMC or BMA to comment… As BUPA redirected you, from an ophthalmologist recommended by your GP then perhaps they are liable for your less than ideal outcome. I would therefore include them in your legal action...


Hi Anon,

I didn't see your comment until a moment ago. Thank you for the disclosure and the advice.

As an ophthalmic surgeon who operates outside of the BUPA production line I am assuming that if an individual who said they were a designer, had excellent (really excellent) distance vision with RGP lenses, very early stage cataracts and presbyopia came to you, you would probably be inclined to tell them to go away?

On this site Sasha Rodoy highlighted Barbara Windsor's situation. Clearly she was a candidate for refractive surgery. Selling it like fitting a pair of contact lenses is another matter.

Your points about BUPA are all well made I think, except for one. I don't think I have a cat in hell's chance of suing BUPA. They can put their hands up and say 'we're just insurance brokers' and back away from the fact they are making decisions that affect patients. They are simply too rich, too powerful and too distanced.

Which is why it might be fun to try :)

However: the structure and responsibility of the various organisations and colleges involved here is obfuscated and deliberately confused. This is why I completely agree with Sasha and John McDonnell, that the industry needs regulation which is fit for purpose.
Last Edit:07 Dec 2015 12:49 by Carl G
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