PreLex in Toulon — Presbyopic Lens Exchange (clear lens)
PreLex (Presbyopic Lens Exchange) treats presbyopia combined with other refractive errors in patients over 50. The principle: the crystalline lens — the eye’s natural lens — is aspirated and replaced with a multifocal implant, exactly as in cataract surgery. It is one of the lens-based techniques of refractive surgery. The results are definitive and durable: the patient gets full treatment of their presbyopia and will no longer need cataract surgery later, since the natural lens has already been replaced.
PreLex: the essentials
- Principle: the clear lens is replaced with a multifocal implant (as in cataract surgery)
- Treats: presbyopia + myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism
- Best for: patients over 50 wishing to be free of glasses at all distances
- Bonus: no future cataract surgery needed
- Both eyes: one eye per week, with an anaesthetist present
- Recovery: 1 to 7 days
- Dr Bourdon’s fee: €4,000 for both eyes (€2,400 if early cataract)
How does PreLex work?
PreLex is carried out exactly like cataract surgery with a multifocal implant, in two stages (one eye per week), with an anaesthetist present:
- Local anaesthesia and sedation, under the operating microscope.
- A 2.2 mm micro-incision; the lens capsule is opened.
- The natural lens is aspirated (phacoemulsification).
- A multifocal implant is injected and unfolds in the capsule.
- An intracameral antibiotic is given; the incision is self-sealing.
Duration: 15 to 30 minutes per eye. The other eye is operated a few days later.
Advantages and limits
- Advantages: full treatment of presbyopia and other errors, definitive result, no future cataract, glasses independence at several distances.
- Limits: intraocular surgery, possible night-time halos with multifocal implants (neuroadaptation), best suited from age 50.
Other techniques: PRK · LASIK · SMILE · Phakic ICL implant
Frequently asked questions about PreLex
Sources
Article written and reviewed by Dr Hugo Bourdon, ophthalmic surgeon at the Clinique Saint-Michel ELSAN and the Centre Iris – Institut Toulonnais d’Ophtalmologie (281 rue Jean Jaurès, Toulon).
