Services

  • Cataract surgery replaces your eye's cloudy natural lens with an artificial one. Choosing a premium lens means getting a high-tech replacement that not only clears up your vision but can also correct astigmatism and allow you to see clearly at multiple distances (near, intermediate, and far)—minimizing or completely eliminating your need for glasses afterward

  • Unlike traditional, high-risk glaucoma surgeries, MIGS uses microscopic equipment and tiny incisions—often the same ones used during cataract surgery—to gently bypass or open up the eye's natural drainage system. It is highly popular because it is much safer, has a faster recovery time, and can drastically reduce (or completely eliminate) your need for daily, frustrating glaucoma eye drops.

  • Dry Eyes: Condition where your eyes don't produce enough quality tears, leading to stinging, burning, and blurry vision.

    Glaucoma: Damage to the eye's optic nerve, usually caused by high fluid pressure, which can lead to permanent loss of side (peripheral) vision if left untreated.

    Macular Degeneration: Gradual breakdown of the center of the retina (the macula), which blurs your sharp, straight-ahead vision needed for reading or driving.

    Diabetic Retinopathy: Damage to the blood vessels in the back of the eye caused by high blood sugar, which can leak fluid and severely impair sight.

  • Severe inflammation inside the eye, specifically affecting the middle layer of tissue called the uvea. Unlike common pink eye, uveitis happens deep within the eye, causing redness, blurred vision, floating spots, and a deep ache that is highly sensitive to light.

  • Pediatric ophthalmology is a specialized branch of eye care focused on treating eye diseases, vision development problems, and eye alignment issues (like crossed eyes) specifically in infants, children, and teenagers.

    Myopia is the medical term for nearsightedness (blurry distance vision). Instead of just giving a child stronger glasses every year as their eyes grow, myopia management uses specialized treatments—like special daytime lenses, or prescription eye drops—to actively slow down how fast their nearsightedness worsens. This helps protect their long-term vision health into adulthood.

  • Eye exam where an optometrist or ophthalmologist measures the exact size, shape, and curve of your eye's surface to find the perfect lens for you.

  • During this test, the doctor flips different lenses in front of your eyes using a large, mask-like machine (a phoropter) and asks, "Which is better, 1 or 2?" By measuring how light bends as it enters your eye, this test pinpoints exactly how much nearsightedness, farsightedness, or astigmatism you have so we can write your prescription for glasses or contact lenses.

    For very small children, a lens bar or loose lenses are used instead.

If you have any questions or want to learn more about the procedures, check our resources below: