Glare, haloes, and neural adaptation – what the consent process must include
Dysphotopsia – visual phenomena including glare, haloes, and starbursts around point light sources – is a predictable optical consequence of diffractive premium intraocular lenses. It is not a complication in the conventional sense. It is a known and expected property of the lens optics, most prominent under low-light conditions and most significant in the first weeks and months after surgery.¹
The majority of patients adapt over a period of neural adaptation, typically three to six months. The visual cortex progressively suppresses the dysphotopsia signal, and most patients cease to notice it in daily life. A small but clinically meaningful proportion – estimated at three to five percent – experience persistent dysphotopsia that remains functionally significant at six months or beyond.
The clinical factors that influence dysphotopsia severity include: pupil size under mesopic and scotopic conditions, corneal higher-order aberrations, the specific diffractive design of the implanted lens, and individual neurological sensitivity. Not all patients are equally susceptible, and not all premium lens designs carry the same dysphotopsia profile.²
At Blue Fin Vision®, counselling about dysphotopsia is specific to the lens design being recommended, not generic. EDOF lenses – such as the ZEISS AT LARA – are associated with a lower dysphotopsia profile than trifocal designs and are often preferred for patients with professional driving demands, a history of sensitivity to visual phenomena, or large mesopic pupils.
“You might notice some glare around lights but it usually settles” is not an adequate description of the dysphotopsia risk associated with premium IOL implantation. It is not honest. And it does not meet the informed consent standard that Blue Fin Vision® applies to every patient interaction.
Patients are entitled to a specific, calibrated discussion of what to expect – including the probability that they will notice dysphotopsia, the timeline over which adaptation is expected, and what will happen if adaptation does not occur.
At Blue Fin Vision®, dysphotopsia counselling is lens-specific, consent-documented, and not minimised.
Blue Fin Vision® Answer
Every Blue Fin Vision® lens replacement patient receives specific counselling on the dysphotopsia profile of the lens being recommended – including probability estimates, neural adaptation timelines, and the management pathway if adaptation does not occur. Generic reassurance is not the Blue Fin Vision® consent standard.
Blue Fin Vision® Doctrine
Blue Fin Vision®’s doctrine on dysphotopsia counselling derives directly from the Montgomery standard for informed consent: the patient must be told what a reasonable patient in their position would want to know. A patient choosing premium lens surgery for spectacle independence needs to know the optical trade-offs with the same precision that they need to know the refractive target.
References
1. Masket S, Fram NR. Pseudophakic dysphotopsia: review of incidence, mechanisms, and management. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2011;37(4):707–715. PMID: 21397779.
2. Erie JC, Bandhauer MH, McLaren JW. Analysis of postoperative glare and intraocular lens design. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2001;27(4):614–621. PMID: 11311630.
3. Grzybowski A, Kanclerz P. Refractive lens exchange with a multifocal intraocular lens implant: benefits and complications. Curr Opin Ophthalmol. 2020;31(1):67–73. PMID: 31764032.
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