W. Andrew Maxwell
St Thomas' Hospital
9 Papers
36 Citations
W. Andrew Maxwell is an academic researcher from St Thomas' Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intraocular lens & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications.
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Papers
Functional outcomes after bilateral implantation of apodized diffractive aspheric acrylic intraocular lenses with a +3.0 or +4.0 diopter addition power: Randomized multicenter clinical study
TL;DR: Intermediate vision at a mean reading distance of approximately 40 cm was better with the aspheric IOL with a +3.0 D add than with theAspheric IIO with a -4.0 diopter addition power, as shown by the near peak in the mean binocular defocus curve.
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Clinical results of the blue-light filtering AcrySof Natural foldable acrylic intraocular lens
John C. Marshall,Robert J. Cionni,James A. Davison,Paul H. Ernest,Robert Lehmann,W. Andrew Maxwell,Kerry Solomon +6 more
TL;DR: The blue‐light filtering AcrySof Natural IOL was equivalent to the conventional Acry Sof lens in terms of postoperative visual performance, and additional long‐term clinical studies should show whether the IOL actually provides the theoretical benefits to retinal health.
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Reduced effect of glare disability on driving performance in patients with blue light-filtering intraocular lenses
TL;DR: The IOL incorporating blue light–filtering technology significantly reduced glare disability and improved the driver’s ability to safely execute a left turn with oncoming traffic in the presence of glare simulating low‐angle sun conditions.
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•Book
The Surgical Rehabilitation of Vision: An Integrated Approach to Anterior Segment Surgery
Lee T. Nordan,W. Andrew Maxwell,James A. Davison,James H. Little,R Bruce Grene +4 more
- 01 Oct 1991
TL;DR: This book is a kind of precious book written by an experienced author and it will show the reasonable reasons why you need to read this book.
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Refractive surgery and informed consent. Radial keratotomy with small optical zone hexagonal keratotomy.
Lee T. Nordan,W. Andrew Maxwell +1 more
TL;DR: Should a surgeon perform surgery that has a large chance of permanently reducing a patient's best corrected visual acuity by one to two lines of vision and reduce the quality of vision, even if an informed consent for such a procedure is obtained?
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