About Me

Alleviating Knee Pain

Due to an injury I sustained nearly nine years ago, I sometimes experience knee pain. I’m constantly researching new ways to treat my pain. Have you dealt with aggravating knee pain for an extended period of time? Consider visiting an orthopedic doctor near you. This individual can likely diagnose what is causing your discomfort. Depending on your unique situation, your physician might recommend you undergo physical therapy. Your doctor may also prescribe you an anti-inflammatory drug. Changing your diet might also help you feel better. On this blog, I hope you will discover ingenious ways to help you recover from constant knee pain. Enjoy!

Search

Latest Posts

Tags

Alleviating Knee Pain

Coordinating The Removal Of An Ocular Brain Tumor: How Opticians Play A Part

by Roberto Morales

If you have recently been diagnosed with a tumor that is one part ocular and one part brain tumor, you may be wondering how your sight will be affected after the tumor is removed. You may even be wondering who will remove the tumor, since it is lodged in part of your brain but also in part of your eye, eye socket or optic nerve. Coordinating the surgery with aftercare is quite a task, but your eye doctor will make sure that an ophthalmologist, opticians and an oncologist are all present in the surgical suite. Here is how the surgery is likely to go, and what opticians will do for you during and after the surgery.

Removal of Part of the Skull Versus Surgery Through the Eye Socket

If at all possible, the oncologist and the ophthalmologist will work together to decide how to open up your head to get to the tumor. If it is part of your eye and/or eye socket, it is more than probable that they will remove your eye to get to the tumor. If they can save your eye, they will try, otherwise they may just sew the lids together to preserve the eye socket. If they can place a "glass" eye in the socket after removing the tumor, that is where the opticians come in. The opticians will take measurements of the empty socket and order a false eye to fit the space.

If, instead of going through the eye socket to cut out the tumor, your oncologist and ophthalomologist decide to cut open your skull, then your head will be shaved, washed and prepped for surgery. After you are sound asleep, a bone saw cuts open the space where your doctors/surgeons think they have the best angle and best chance of cutting out all of the tumor. Your skull is then stapled back together and your flesh is sewn over the wound. During this type of surgery, your eye, the socket and the nerves are all evaluated for any effects the tumor removal may have on them. If there are any possible vision problems, the opticians are notified and they will make adjustments to any prescription eyewear you currently have or help you find corrective lenses after you have recovered adequately from surgery and have had your eyes tested.

Providing Post-Surgery Training and Rehabilitation 

If you end up with a false eye, you will need instructions on how to keep the socket moist and the fake eye from irritating the tissues behind it. If you get to keep your own eye but need ocular rehab, your optician, like those at Eyewear Liquidators, will help you with that too. Most people who undergo surgery for an ocular brain tumor will need corrective lenses afterward, something which opticians ordinarily provide patients anyway.

Share