Lens replacement surgery can be suitable if you need reading glasses, especially when you also depend on glasses for distance vision.
How it helps with reading glasses
As the natural lens ages, it struggles to focus up close, leading to presbyopia and the need for readers. Replacing the lens with a carefully chosen implant can improve both distance and near vision.
- Reduces reliance on reading glasses in many day-to-day situations
- Can also correct underlying short-sightedness, long-sightedness, or astigmatism
- Removes the ageing lens before it becomes a cataract
- Different lens designs are available for distance, intermediate, and near tasks
- Often suits people from their late forties onwards
What to consider before deciding
Lens replacement does not always remove the need for glasses completely. It is important to understand likely outcomes and possible visual side effects before choosing surgery.
- Fine print and prolonged reading may still need weak reading glasses
- Some people notice halos or glare around lights, particularly at night
- There are small risks, similar to cataract surgery, which your surgeon will explain
- A full examination checks that your eyes are otherwise healthy
- Your lifestyle, work, and hobbies guide which lens type is most suitable