50 years of phaco
EuroTimes looks back to the early days of phaco surgery in the US and Europe
Sean Henahan
Published: Monday, October 2, 2017
Fifty years ago, 1967 was a year of revolutionary ideas in culture, politics, science and medicine. That year saw the debut of the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s album, the summer of love, the first pocket calculator and the first heart transplant. It was during this time of creative ferment that a struggling eye surgeon in New York had an epiphany in a dentist’s chair that would forever change the way cataract surgery would be performed.
Charles Kelman MD was an American surgeon who had trained in Switzerland and, by his own account, was more interested in music than medicine in his residency years. He ultimately committed to ophthalmology and began developing ways to improve cataract surgery.
At that time, cataract surgery was performed via a large incision, often under general anaesthesia, leaving patients aphakic and with a long period of convalescence. Patients would then be fitted with bulky glasses.
“Charlie’s original idea for phaco was to have an operation that would allow patients to leave hospital in a short amount of time, not have them lying around with pillows around their head for weeks so the eyes didn’t fall apart,” noted Richard Packard MD in an interview with EuroTimes.
Dr Kelman was convinced that cataract surgery could and should be done by way of small incision. He had initially developed a cryotherapy probe that showed some potential to improve intracapsular surgery, but then began looking for some other way to break up and remove the cataract through a small incision. He tried all manner of drills and cutters with no success and had reached an impasse.
To clear his mind, he decided to get a haircut and visit his dentist for a teeth descaling. He describes his eureka moment in his lively memoir Through my Eyes, The Story of a Surgeon who Dared to Take on the Medical World.
“I sat in his chair as he reached over and took a long silver instrument out of its cradle and turned it on. A fine mist came off the tip, but the tip didn’t seem to be moving.”
He inquired about the device and learned that it was an ultrasonic probe that vibrated at 25K/sec, cleaning teeth via the principle of acceleration. This was exactly what he had been looking for, a way that would allow the cataractous lens to be broken up without moving the lens in the eye during surgery. He reports that he actually hugged and kissed his dentist and ran out of the office.
His insight that the ultrasonic probe could be repurposed to break up a cataract safely through a small incision would completely revolutionise cataract surgery, yielding improved safety and efficiency, not to mention better visual outcomes.
Dr Kelman did not have much success when he first tried to share his ideas with the ophthalmology world. Indeed, he says in the early years his ideas only met with “scepticism, laughter, rejection and professional jealousy, even sabotage”.
PHACO IN EUROPE
Dr Kelman persevered and began giving courses for surgeons interested in the controversial technique. It was at a Barraquer symposium in Spain that Eric Arnott, at the time a promising young surgeon from the UK, would first encounter Dr Kelman and his novel technique.
Dr Eric Arnott, who pioneered phaco in Britain, mid-operation