The
Zeiss IOL Master
was
approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration in March of 2000.
A non-contact optical device that measures the distance from the corneal vertex
to the retinal pigment epithelium by partial coherence interferometry, the
IOL Master
is consistently accurate to within ±0.02
mm or better.
The
IOL Master
is the first such
device to be widely used in clinical ophthalmology. Calibrated against the ultra-high
resolution 40-MHz Grieshaber Biometric System, an internal algorithm approximates
the distance to the vitreoretinal interface, for the equivalent of an immersion
A-scan ultrasonic axial length.
Considering the fact that axial length measurements by A-scan
ultrasonography (using a standard 10-MHz transducer) have a
typical resolution of 0.10 mm to 0.12 mm, axial length measurements
by the
IOL Master
represent a fivefold increase in accuracy.
The
IOL Master
allows
fast, accurate measurements of eye length and surface curvature,
necessary for cataract surgery. The
IOL
Master
is more efficient because it allows measurements to be taken
with complete confidence in the accuracy of the results. Also,
because the
IOL
Master
is non-contact (nothing touches the eye
itself), there is no need for anesthesia and there is no potential
for spread of contamination from the instruments.
The IOL Master section
of this website contains
a complete online user's manual, including
a downloadable version:
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