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Cataract Surgery
Learn how cataract surgery can help improve your vision.


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Optical Shop
Phoenixville Eye Care Optical Shop offers a wide variety of modern styles along with all the classics.

 

 

Sports Eye Injuries

 

Soccer playing wearing protective eye wear.Every year, hospital emergency rooms treat nearly 40,000 victims of sports eye injuries. All professional and recreational athletes participating in eye-hazardous sports need to wear eye protection. To help prevent sports eye injuries, protective polycarbonate eyewear should be worn whether or not prescription eyewear is needed. All prescription eyewear used during sports should be made from polycarbonate.

 

The sports causing the most eye injuries are basketball, baseball, and racquet sports, but any sport where an object can fly toward the eye is considered hazardous. Unbreakable eyeglass frames, goggles, or facemasks are required when there is a potential for eye injury. Polycarbonate lenses have the highest impact resistance of any eyeglass material. They are 20 times stronger than ordinary eyeglass material, and while not unbreakable, they do afford the best protection available against eye injury from any high-velocity object.

 

Helmets with eye shields are recommended for football and other contact sports. Many sports, such as baseball, hockey, and men’s lacrosse, require a helmet with polycarbonate face mask or wire shield, especially for very young athletes. Face guards can be worn over glasses and are used primarily for football, ice hockey, and similar high-risk sports. Some sports such as hockey have established standards for eye protection at the national level.

 

For high-speed sports such as skiing, wear special frames sturdy enough to protect the eyes from any impact. Wear ultraviolet-absorbing goggles or sunglasses while skiing to protect the eyes from glare, ultraviolet rays, and exposure to weather.

 

Boxing presents a high risk for eye injury. Unfortunately, there is no adequate protection available.

 

Contact lenses are not a form of protective eyewear. Contact lens wearers require additional protection when participating in sports, especially if the contacts are of the rigid type.

 

People with only one functional eye should carefully consider the risks of contact sports. Wearing adequate eye protection is imperative for people with sight in only one eye.

 

 

eye protection

 

 

 

Other Ocular Conditions

 

Allergies and the Eyes

Bell’s Palsy

Headache

Herpes Zoster

Migraine

Traumatic Hyphema

Complete Eye Examinations

Computer Screens

Eye Care Facts and Myths

First Aid for Eye Injuries

How To Instill Eye Drops

Intraocular Foreign Bodies and Sharp Trauma

Legal Blindness

Living With Vision Loss in One Eye

Preventing Eye Injuries

Sports Eye Injuries

Smoking and Eye Disease

 


 

Other Ocular Conditions

 

Allergies and the Eyes

Bell’s Palsy

Headache

Herpes Zoster

Migraine

Traumatic Hyphema

Complete Eye Examinations

Computer Screens

Eye Care Facts and Myths

First Aid for Eye Injuries

How To Instill Eye Drops

Intraocular Foreign Bodies and Sharp Trauma

Legal Blindness

Living With Vision Loss in One Eye

Preventing Eye Injuries

Sports Eye Injuries

Smoking and Eye Disease

 

 

Phoenixville Eye Care Specialists
720 S. Main Street
Phoenixville, PA
19460-3844
Phone: 610-933-3498
FAX: 610-933-5052
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