Monthly Archives: October 2011

To Loupe or Not To Loupe? That is the Question!

Is magnification really, really necessary for successful strabismus surgery? May be not….. Does magnification benefit the surgeon who performs strabismus surgery? Yes!!

Advantages of Magnification

The surgeon sees the anatomy in more detail in the operative field – enabling more focused attention to finer detail – and contributing to:

  • Accurate suture placement
  • Awareness of small vessels making it easier to control bleeding
  • Accurate identification of tissue layers
  • Better visualization of sutures and needles
  • Accurate needle placement, enabling a shallow “scleral tunnel” – avoiding scleral perforation

Methods to Achieve Magnification with Loupes

  • Power 2.5x to 4.5x (2.5 okay for “younger eyes” but eventually 3.5x to 4.0x is the choice for older surgeons)
  • Working Distance + 16″
  • A light mounted on a head band and placed between the eyepieces of the loupe is an option many surgeons prefer – this light is especially useful for working in a “hole” such as when doing orbit surgery.

Types of Loupes

  • A headband mounted light is a very useful adjunct to loupe magnification in that it improves the view when working in a “hole” and in cases where the surgeon’s or the assistant’s head blocks the fixed operating lights.
  • Spectacle mounted loupes are the most popular. They should include distance correction and may have a small bifocal add.
  • Presbyopic surgeons benefit from a small bifocal to see at near when looking around loupes
  • Head band mounted loupes may be used while the surgeon wears spectacles. They may also be used by several different surgeons. Most surgeons who use loupes purchase the spectacle mounted type.

Want to know more or order magnification loupes? Contact AdmetecVision at www.admetec-vision.com, or call us at our toll-free number: 1-888-670-5063. Prefer to email? You can reach us at contact@admetec-vision.com.

Ready to make your purchase? You can order now online!

(Image courtesy of Wikipedia)

Lupenbrillen in der Zahnmedizin – Gute Sache!

You can only treat, what you can see, and you can only see, what you know”.  Also sprach S. Kim, der Pionier der Dentalmikroskopie aus Pennsylvania. Es beschreibt „zahnärztlichen Intellekt“. Das Wort  „Intellekt” umpasst umgang mit Informationen –  Wahrnehmungen werden gefiltert, verarbeitet, bewertet, geordnet, verglichen und gespeichert.Dieser Prozeß bestimmt nicht unwesentlich Arbeit am Patienten.

Nikolaus Kopernikus, Johannes Kepler und Isaak Newton wären ohne verbesserte Tele-Optik heute wahrscheinlich genau so unbekannt wie etwa Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, Paul Ehrlich oder Robert Koch ohne eine leistungsfähige Mikro-Optik.

Die Entwicklung der Vergrößerungshilfen in der Zahnmedizin umfasst Operationsmikroskops und Lupenbrillen.  So wird an Universitäten die Benutzung von Lupenbrillen bereits im Phantomkurs empfohlen. Hauptargumente dafür sind eine Verbesserung der Prozess- und Ergebnisqualität sowie auch ergonomische Aspekte.

Dentale Vergrößerungshilfen sind Kopfgetragene Mikroskope, digitale 3D-Sehhilfen, Lupensysteme nach Galileo (Vergrößerungsfaktor bis 3,5) oder Kepler (Vergrößerungsfaktor etwa 3,0 – 5,5).

Auch in der visuellen Kariesdiagnostik zeichnet sich der Einsatz von Vergrößerungshilfen durch eine signifikante Erhöhung der Sensitivität aus (man entdeckt mehr Karies). Auch bei der visuellen Verifizierung eines cracked tooth syndrome (Infraktion im Dentin) leistet eine geeignete Vergrößerungshilfe gute Dienste.

Eine korrekte Diagnose setzt Erkennen und Wissen voraus, und eine korrekte Therapie basiert auf einer korrekten Diagnose. Ein vergrößertes Sichtfeld ermöglicht also genaueres Arbeiten. Das hat zur Folge, dass bei invasiven Eingriffen potentiell weniger Schaden entsteht. Aus dieser Überlegung heraus gibt es kaum Argumente, weshalb Patienten den Gebrauch einer geeigneten Vergrößerung bei invasiven Eingriffen vorenthalten sollten.

(Source and image: Courtesy of SPITTA DentalKompakt)

Die Lupenbrille ist ein unentbehrliches Hilfsmittel in Medizin

Die Lupenbrille ermöglich sehr genaues Arbeiten. Eine Lupe entwirft kein vergrößertes reelles Bild von einem Gegenstand, sondern vergrößert mittels einer dynamischen Anpassung der Brechkraft des Auges (Akkommodation) den Sehwinkel für das Auge.

Neben konventionellen und speziellen Lupen gibt es auch die Lupenbrille, die vor allem in der Medizin und Technik verwendet wird. Vor allem in der Chirurgie, insbesondere bei Augen-, Herz- oder Darmoperationen, ist eine Vergrößerungsbrille ein unentbehrliches Hilfsmittel, denn ohne sie wäre ein exaktes Arbeiten nicht möglich. Aber auch in der Computertechnik ist die Lupenbrille bei der Erzeugung von Mikrochips und diversen weiteren Produkten ein gängiger Gebrauchsgegenstand und für die Qualität der Ware Grundvoraussetzung.

Hoche Qualität ist bei der Lupenbrille unerläßlich. Eine gute Lupenbrille verfügt über maximale Sehschärfe und Klarheit. Verzerrungen des Bildes oder farbliche Veränderungen im Randbereich des Sehfeldes sollten keinesfalls auftreten. Eine hohe Qualität ist nur mittels hochwertiger optischer Systeme zu erreichen. Schwere Okulare und Brillengestelle wirkten sich früher im Gebrauch einer Lupenbrille sehr nachteilig in der Handhabung aus. Heutzutage ist das anders.

Vergrößerungen der Lupenbrille – dass eine gute Vergrößerungsbrille nicht unbedingt viel Gewicht haben muss und trotzdem gestochen scharfe Bilder liefert, beweist der Hersteller Admetec-Vision. Admetec bietet zum Beispiel eine kompakte und praktische Lupenbrille mit einem Gesamtgewicht von nur 46 Gramm (inklusive Fassung) an.

Eine spezielle Ganzmetallfassung gewährleistet einen kurzen Abstand von Auge und Okular. Die Okulare sind übrigens zusätzlich noch einzeln einstellbar. Die neu berechnete Präzisionsoptik, die bereits mehrfach vergütet wurde, garantiert eine exakte Vergrößerungssicht und ein helles, brillantes Bild. Eine konventionelle Binokularlupe ermöglicht zusätzlich eine erhebliche Ausdehnung des Sichtfeldes. Perfekte Passform, ein fester Sitz und das geringe Gewicht garantieren optimalen Tragekomfort.

(Original: http://www.medplus24.de/medizintechnik/lupenbrille-213)

Why Loupes are a wise long-term investment

Since the 1980s, TV series such as Chicago Hope, Grey’s Anatomy, ER, and House M.D. have been featuring surgeons operating while wearing loupes. It makes the show look authentic and the doctors in it as highly regarded professionals. They use of the best equipment available in order to provide excellent care to their patients.

When it is time to buy loupes, an appealing frame looks is part of it. But the major consideration is how the optical equipment will perform and how will it stand up to everyday use.

The two most common types of loupe configurations available are flip-up and through-the-lens (TTL). Through-the-lens optics are customized to meet the clinician’s individual needs. They are permanently glued in place. The main advantages of using TTL loupes (compared to flip-ups) are:

1. The optics stay aligned
2. They are well-balanced
3. They are light-weight
4. They provide a wider field of vision (the optics are close to the eyes)

The TTL setup is similar to top-lined reading glasses where the wearer looks over the optic to view the room using distance vision and though the optic when viewing the patient’s mouth at close range.

Flip-up telescopes are adjustable. Some clinicians with strong prescriptions or bifocals therefore prefer flip-up telescopes because the optics can be flipped up and out of the way. When wearing flip-up telescopes, it is advised to use a head strap that is fastened securely around the wearer’s head. Flip-up loupes are adjustable and can be changed to different frames if wanted. It is easy to change a prescription in a flip-up loupe if the vision of the clinician changes.

Choosing a lower magnification level offers a wider field of vision and a more forgiving depth of field when looking through the optic area than higher magnification. Stronger telescopes zoom in to a narrow field and are difficult to work with independently.

When choosing optics make sure your loupes are:  light-weight, have a wide field of vision, have three-dimensional image qualities,and have very sharp high-resolution image. For these reasons, Admetec-Vision is often the preferred choice.

Good frames are made of titanium to pass the test of time and to ensure daily use. The purchase of a loupe is a long-term investment. It is important to buy a quality product that will stand up to daily use to prevent the need to repurchase in a short period of time.

Editorial note: The full  article was originally published in Hygiene Tribune US, Vol. 2, Issue 1, 2009.

AdmetecVision Salutes David C. Knight M.D. on being named Humanitarian of the Year

David C. Knight, MD, a general surgeon who has practiced at Waterbury Hospital for more than 25 years, has been named the hospital’s “2011 Humanitarian of the Year” for his work bringing medical supplies and expertise to underdeveloped countries across the globe.

Knight, who is the Associate Program Director of Waterbury Hospital’s General Surgery Residency Program, has helped save countless lives over the past several years through a non-profit organization he founded that provides much-needed surgical “loupes” to surgeons in Third World countries. Loupes, which are commonplace in the U.S. and other developed nations, are high-tech optical glasses that allow surgeons to identify and focus on minute details during the course of a procedure.

In 2006, while touring hospitals and medical clinics in Vietnam and Cambodia, Knight developed a friendship with a Cambodian plastic surgeon who told him he routinely conducted procedures without the assistance of loupes. The encounter prompted Knight to form Loupes Around the World, an organization that works to raise donations to provide loupes to surgeons in Third World countries. Since then, the organization has provided 182 loupes to surgeons in more than 42 countries.

Besides his work raising money for loupes, Knight has also taken part in several humanitarian missions to the African nation of Liberia, which is recovering from a recent civil war that decimated much of its medical infrastructure. Before the war, the country had over 400 physicians treating a population of over 3.5 million; after the war, there were only 50 physicians remaining, six of them surgeons. Knight has conducted four missions to the country, providing badly needed assistance and teaching to Liberian physicians working in the country’s largest hospital in the capital of Monrovia.

Knight will be recognized during the hospital’s 12th Annual Charity Gala on Saturday, November 19 at the Villa Rosa (Ponte Club)

(Credit Ronald DeRosa)

The Use of Loupe Magnification In Microsurgery In The Third World: A Trinidad Experience

By: Maniram Ragbir, Consultant, Surgery, Plastic Surgery, General Hospital, POS, Trinidad

A  retrospective analysis was conducted of 38 patients in whom microvascular techniques were used for reconstruction at the General Hospital, Port-of-Spain.

Microsurgical techniques are applied to many aspects of reconstructive surgery. However, the operating microscope is still a very expensive piece of equipment and may not be readily available in the third world.

Microsurgical success with loupe magnification is well documented. In their publication, the authors analyze the effectiveness of microsurgical procedures performed in Trinidad over a 15 year period with the use of loupe magnification. Aim was to determine the effectiveness of microsurgery in the third world.

Methods and Results:

  • A 15 year retrospective analysis of microsurgical procedures performed with the aid of loupe magnification was done at the General Hospital, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad.
  •  There were a total of 38 cases, which included 12 replant surgeries; 12 free tissue transfers; 5 supercharged TRAM flaps; 4 facial nerve repairs; 5 peripheral nerve repairs with grafts.
  •  The age range was 12 to 65 years with 23 males and 15 females. All procedures were performed by one of two trained microvascular surgeons with the aid of loupe magnification.

Complications included two failed hand replants, partial necrosis of one TRAM which was salvaged with a pedicled latissimus dorsi and minor necrosis of one latissimus dorsi flap.

Conclusion:
With appropriate training microsurgical procedures can be successfully performed with loupe magnification in the third world.

The use of loupe magnification in microsurgery was well justified in trained hands. Its use at this center is advocated on the grounds of cost effectiveness, portability, efficiency, and operator freedom. The purchase price of the instruments is nominal in comparison with the operating microscope.

(Source and image: Internet Scientific Publications http://www.ispub.com)