Recently released

Articles from the most recent issue of EyeWorld are posted weekly on eyeworld.org.

  • ASCRS News

    Highlights of the 2026 Annual Meeting

    Attendees will not want to miss these events before and during the 2026 ASCRS Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C.
  • ASCRS News

    SightLine tackles regulatory, reimbursement topics

    SightLine at ASCRS—a business forum focused on the financial and business aspects of ophthalmology—returns ahead of the ASCRS Annual Meeting. The theme for this year’s program focuses on how government action directly affects the business future of ophthalmology.
  • ASCRS News

    Binkhorst Lecture preview

    Kerry D. Solomon, MD, will give this year’s Cornelius Binkhorst, MD, Lecture, at the ASCRS Annual Meeting, which will take place on the ASCRS Main Stage on Saturday, April 11. He plans to focus his presentation on artificial intelligence.
  • ASCRS News

    Innovator’s Lecture Preview

    This year, Sean Ianchulev, MD, will give the Charles D. Kelman, MD, Innovator’s Lecture on the ASCRS Main Stage on Sunday, April 12. Dr. Ianchulev spoke to EyeWorld to preview the innovations he will discuss at the ASCRS Annual Meeting.
  • Cataract

    Zonulopathy: signs and surgical management

    Having varying degrees of zonulopathy can make a case more challenging. Two surgeons discussed what they look for to determine if a patient has some form of zonulopathy, the best lenses and tools to use in these cases, and other important approaches to proceeding with surgery.
  • Refractive

    When the Ks don’t align

    EyeWorld spoke with two experts on the topic of when the Ks don’t align—when misalignment is clinically significant, what can be done about it, and how it impacts lens choices.

EyeWorld archives

This archive represents a sample of EyeWorld’s archived content. For more complete and comprehensive archives, please visit hub.eyeworld.org.

  • November 2020

    Handling dry eye prior to cataract surgery

    It’s important to address underlying conditions prior to cataract surgery, and dry eye is one such condition. Physicians must identify and treat it to ensure the tear film is optimized and measurements are correct.
  • May 2011

    Don't exclude thin cornea patients from LASIK for fear of ectasia

    The belief that LASIK shouldn't be performed on thin corneas because of the risk of sight-threatening ectasia isn't scientifically valid, according to one researcher. Abnormal corneal topography is the most important preop risk factor for the complication, said William Trattler, MD.
  • October 2010

    An unusual dilation issue

    Presenting with a "completely dilated and non-reactive" pupil on postop day 1 can be nerve-wracking for the surgeon. Here's how one physician dealt with the complication.

Flipbooks

Read digital flipbook versions of the print magazine from 2011 to the present on the EyeWorld hub.


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