Accommodating intraocular lenses restore the accommodation of the human eye. Such lenses generally comprise a variable power lens and at least one lens driver.
Description of Related Art Prior art documents include EP1037572, WO0021467, EP1416890 and related documents disclose intraocular lenses with a single optical element which are positioned inside the capsular bag and driven by movement of the capsular bag in a direction perpendicular to the optical axis, in a lateral direction. These lenses differ from the lenses disclosed in the current document which lenses are, in the preferred embodiment, positioned the lens on top of the capsular bag, at the sulcus plane, with the wedge shaped rigid flange moved by constriction of the sulcus in an axial direction with this movement translated into movement of optics into a lateral direction.
EP2547289, and, for example, EP3791827, JP2020124542 and other documents related thereto disclose lenses comprising inflatable optics which can be coupled to inflatable haptics with the haptics partially filled with a fluid communicating with the inflatable optics via a conduit with the ocular structure applying a pumping force on the haptic to cause fluid to flow via said the conduit to the inflatable optics. Such haptics are inflatable, not rigid, and do not move in a lateral direction during the accommodative process while the present invention concerns lenses with rigid, solid, flanges which translate axial movement of an accommodative structure into lateral movement of the haptics during the accommodative process.
US2019269499, US2016030161, EP3791827 and other documents disclosing largely similar designs disclose an accommodative lens coupled to the capsular bag of which the optic is, as excerpted from, in this example US2019269499: ‘deformable such that the inward pressure or outward tension on the optic caused by ciliary muscle contraction or relaxation causes the optic to change shape’ and “in other words, with peripheral force (contraction of the ciliary muscle) and inward movement of the haptics [ . . . ] and with relaxation of the peripheral force (relaxation of the ciliary muscle [ . . . ] and the haptics can be placed outside of the lens capsule and positioned in the ciliary sulcus against the ciliary muscle.” Constriction of the sulcus and translation of axial movement of the ciliary muscle into lateral movement of the haptic plays no role in this lens design in which lateral movement of the ciliary muscle results, directly, in lateral movement of lens components.
WO2009154455, WO2011115860 and numerous documents related thereto disclose accommodating lenses comprising two optical elements positioned at the sulcus plane, on top of the capsular bag which are driven by force by the ciliary mass directed in a lateral direction, forces largely perpendicular to the optical axis. These designs are not suited to and do not mention not illustrate translation of axial movement of the ciliary mass into lateral movement of any lens components.
In accommodating lenses disclosed in the present document the lens driver comprises at least one rigid tapered flange, henceforth also: ‘tapered flange’ or ‘flange’ positioned in an accommodative structure of the eye, for example, the sulcus of the eye, the preferred embodiment, or, alternatively, in the rim of the capsular bag. The tapered flange is a wedge shaped tapered flange, which flange tapers towards its peripheral free end. The tapering can have various shapes, for example a linear shape, resulting in a triangular tapering or, alternatively, a curved shape, for example a shape resembling a ‘dolphin's nose’. The preferred embodiment comprising triangular tapering will be used to explain and illustrate the invention.
Such accommodating lens can comprise, for optical functioning, in the preferred embodiment, a radially flexible lens comprising two optical surfaces with the lens providing variable optical power of which the degree of optical power depends on the degree of movement of the mechanical construction in a lateral direction which movement provides a change in the radius of at least one optical surface of the lens. Or, alternatively, the lens can comprise a combination of at least two optical elements with each element comprising at least one largely spherical surface wherein the combination provides variable optical power of which the degree of optical power depends on the degree of movement, in an axial direction, along the optical axis, of the optical elements in opposite directions. Or, alternatively, as disclosed in WO2009154455, WO2011115860 and related documents, incorporated herein by reference, the variable power lens can comprise a combination of at least two optical elements with each element comprising at least one free-form optical surface with the combination of optical surfaces provides variable optical power of which the degree of power depends on the degree of mutual movement in opposite directions of the optical elements in a lateral direction. The free-form optical surfaces can be, for example, smooth cubic optical surfaces.
The variable power lens can also comprise an integrated combination of at least two lenses including at least one, relatively inflexible, fixed power lens and at least one, relatively flexible, variable power lens. All these lenses can be composed of the same lens material, for example, material of which the degree of flexibility depends solely on the degree of cross-linking of the same lens material, by, for example, varying degree of cross-linker material, or, alternatively, applying laser light to selectively alter the degree of cross-linking by intralenticular laser encryption, or, alternatively, the at least two lenses can be manufactured by a layered molding process, or, alternatively, the at least two lenses can be manufactured during a lathing process of a layered lens button. The lens material can be a hydrophilic acrylic lens material, or, alternatively, a hydrophobic acrylic lens material, or, alternatively, the accommodating lens can be composed of a combination of hydrophobic material and hydrophilic material, or, alternatively, any combination of any intraocular materials.
The accommodating lens can be a lens which lens provides both refractive correction of the eye as well as accommodation of the eye. Alternatively, the lens can be an add-on accommodative unit to provide accommodation to an eye of which eye the fixed refraction is corrected by the natural lens, or, alternatively, by any at least one separate fixed optical power artificial intraocular lens which can be positioned in the anterior chamber of the eye, or, alternatively, can be positioned in the posterior chamber of the eye, for example, positioned in the capsular bag of the eye with the add-on accommodative unit in the sulcus.
Note that, firstly, the description of the prior art above is a summary and the explanation of differences between the prior art and the current invention is therefore limited and that, secondly, in the Figures and the description of the Figures, below, positioning of the intraocular lens in the sulcus plane is used to clarify various lens designs and thus this invention not restricted to these particular examples.
In summary, this document discloses accommodating lenses for providing accommodation to an eye, with the eye and the lens having the same optical axis, which lenses comprise at least one variable power lens to accommodate the eye, with the variable power lens has a variable optical power, and at least one rigid lens driver coupled to the variable power lens which driver is arranged to be positioned in an accommodative structure of the eye wherein the rigid lens driver comprising at least one tapered flange which tapers towards its peripheral free end to provide translation of constrictive movement of the structure in the eye in an axial direction into movement onto the variable power lens in a lateral direction. The term rigid is used to indicate that the element does not deform upon compression of the accommodative structure of the eye. The compression of the accommodative structure thus may not cause deformation of the rigid component, but causes the rigid component to move or translate, and exert a force onto the lens components.
The accommodative structure in the eye can be the sulcus of the eye, the wedge shaped gap between the anterior surface of the ciliary mass and the posterior surface of the iris, which wedge constricts during the accommodative process and widens during the dis-accommodative process, alternatively, the accommodative structure of the eye can be the ciliary bag of the eye, in eyes from which the natural lens is removed with, in this example, the accommodative structure being the gap between the posterior section of the capsular bag and the remaining rim of the anterior section of the capsular bag post-capsulorhexis, with the posterior section and the remaining rim providing a gap which gap constricts during the accommodative process and widens during the dis-accommodative process. Note that, in all examples provided in this document the intraocular lens regains its original, relaxed, diameter by restoration of the relaxed shape of the intraocular lens by the inherent, outward, elastical properties of the lens driver and/or elastical properties of optical components.
Note that the optical components of the lens can be also implanted at a position in the eye which position differs from the position in which the lens driver is implanted. For example, but not restricted hereto, the optics can be implanted in the capsular bag with the lens driver positioned at the sulcus plane, in front of the capsular bag to allow the variable optics to be driven by the sulcus. Such construction will allow the optics to be driven also when the capsular bag becomes unsuitable for driving a lens because of, for example, hardening or fibrosis or posterior capsule opacification.
The variable power lens can comprise a radially flexible lens comprising two optical surfaces, wherein the degree of optical power of the variable power lens depends on the degree of movement of the lens driver in a lateral direction with the movement providing a change in the radius of at least one optical surface of the lens, or, alternatively, the variable power lens can be a combination of at least two optical elements with each element comprising at least one largely spherical surface, wherein the combination provides variable optical power of which the degree of optical power depends on the degree of movement in an axial direction of the optical elements in opposite directions, or, alternatively, the variable power lens can be a combination of at least two optical elements with each element comprising at least one free-form optical surface, wherein the combination of optical surfaces provides variable optical power of which the degree of power depends on the degree of mutual movement in opposite directions of at least one of the optical elements in a lateral direction.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2025750 | Jun 2020 | NL | national |
This application is the United States national phase of International Application No. PCT/NL2021/050353 filed Jun. 3, 2021, and claims priority to The Netherlands Patent Application No. 2025750 filed Jun. 4, 2020, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NL2021/050353 | 6/3/2021 | WO |