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Keep Your Nose Clean - Outpatient Surgery Magazine - August 2018

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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Iantech's miLoop recently won FDA approval. It employs a thin fila- ment loop that the surgeon uses to quarter the nucleus. Soft lenses may then be extracted via aspiration; harder ones still require phaco. Of those respondents who've already tried this technology, 9% rate it "very attractive" and another 40% think it's "somewhat attractive." Many say the device has a real niche with mature cataracts. "There's nothing wrong with phaco for most cases," says our Philadelphia oph- thalmologist, "but for the densest cataracts, the addition (not substitu- tion) of miLoop is a godsend." An Iowa nurse anesthetist likes the sim- plicity. "One less instrument to fail," he says. A Tennessee ASC admin- istrator who finds the concept "very attractive" echoes that sentiment: "Cost is the main reason. Phaco machines are extremely expensive and technology changes." The problem is that although the miLoop may reduce the amount of phaco energy in the eye, phaco is typically still required, says a Minnesota director of surgical services. It's better for the patient, but it ends up cutting into profits because reimbursement is fixed. Some facility managers also question the need for a phaco replacement. "If it isn't broken, don't fix it," says Daniel Hauer, CASC, administrator of the Valley Ambulatory Surgery Center in St. Charles, Ill. "Dropless" cataract surgery Post-op shots are hot. Drops are not. We asked our survey respon- dents to rate 2 single injections that surgeons administer at the end of surgery that treat post-op inflammation and dispense with post-op eye drops. So-called "dropless" cataract surgery eliminates noncompli- ance and dosing errors associated with relying on the patient to dis- pense frequent drops following cataract surgery. There are 2 kinds: • Antibiotic-steroid. One-third of our survey respondents say their physicians inject an antibiotic-steroid combination into the posterior 9 4 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E • A U G U S T 2 0 1 8

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