Piercing the darkness
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Elia Powers
November 2003 was a defining month in Dr. Gregg Feinerman’s
ophthalmology career.
That’s when the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of
Crystalens, a flexible intraocular lens that allows patients to
improve their near and distance vision with decreased dependence on
glasses.
Feinerman, based primarily in Newport Beach, started using the
lens in optical surgeries on the day the FDA gave its OK. And he
became the first Orange County ophthalmologist certified to operate
using the lens after the approval.
While Feinerman said the procedure is designed for people ages 45
to 65, one of his most notable patients fell well outside that age
bracket.
Deaf since age 2 and legally blind in his right eye, Long Beach
resident Leslie Noakes, 92, was close to losing vision in his left
eye when his family began searching for solutions this winter.
In February, they decided to bring Noakes to Feinerman’s surgery
center in Irvine for the Crystalens procedure.
“For a period of time he couldn’t read or see well outside,” said
daughter Marti Noakes. “Now, everything is bright and clear and he
can enjoy reading.
“Being deaf wasn’t a handicap for him,” she added. “The problem
was he couldn’t see. He is able to read lips again, which makes
communication 100% easier.”
Eyeonics Inc., the Aliso Viejo-based company that developed
Crystalens, donated the $1,000 lens for Noakes’ procedure after
hearing of his condition. The entire operation normally costs $5,000
per eye, Feinerman said.
Sixteen months after he began using Crystalens, Feinerman said
about 70% of his business now comes from patients wanting the
procedure.
That included Irvine resident Regina Kaplan.
Kaplan, 61, began to have trouble reading freeway signs and small
news print. She had the beginning stages of cataracts and didn’t want
to wait until her vision was beyond repair.
So in early February, she underwent surgery on both eyes.
“My world was closing in,” said Kaplan, whose vision is now 20/15.
“Now I’m able to read the newspaper and see labels on the back of
cans.”
Feinerman, who completed his ophthalmology training at UC Irvine
and founded a vision center bearing his name, is one of 170 surgeons
in the United States who has earned credentials to use Crystalens,
according to Eyeonics cofounder Andy Corley.
“I was excited about the procedure when I first saw the results,”
Feinerman said. “It has made a big difference in helping people
restore their vision.”
Feinerman said a handful of ophthalmologists in California use the
procedure, and up to 25 surgeons nationwide receive their credentials
each month.
Feinerman said the lens works by moving forward and backward with
the eye’s ciliary muscle to help people focus naturally at all
distances.
“It acts like the eye’s natural lens,” he said.
The procedure takes about 20 minutes to complete, and patients are
in and out of the operating room in about 90 minutes.
Feinerman said he can do about seven Crystalens operations per
day.
He makes a 2-millimeter incision in the patient’s eye, vaporizes
the cataracts using an ultrasound instrument and then inserts the
Crystalens implant.
Dr. Stuart Cumming, the chief scientific operator of Eyeonics, who
helped with research and development of Crystalens, said Feinerman
showed immediate interest in the technology and has taken advantage
of the product.
“He’s an excellent surgeon and takes care of his patients,”
Cumming said. “His results show his competence.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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