Resource Library

Find all of the resources you are looking for. From instructional videos to medical abstracts, here you will find all of the details on when, why and how you should use the Morgan Lens.  The Morgan Lens is used in 90% of hospital emergency departments in the USA and can be inserted in less than 20 seconds.

Featured Resources

Training Materials

A list of resources that will help in the initial training in the use for the Morgan Lens.

Morgan Lens Instructional Video

This video is approximately five minutes long and gives instructions for the use of the Morgan Lens, including showing the insertion and removal and describing the recommended uses.

Morgan Lens PowerPoint Presentation

This PowerPoint Presentation covers uses and instructions for using the Morgan Lens.

Morgan Lens Instructions for Use Chart

The Morgan Lens instructions for use chart provides instructions for using the Morgan Lens continuous lavage or medication to the cornea and conjunctiva.

The Morgan Lens Brochure

This brochure contains information about our Products, instructions on how to use them, and references and testimonials related to our products. 

Browse Resources

Morgan Lens PowerPoint Presentation

This PowerPoint Presentation covers uses and instructions for using the Morgan Lens.

Morgan Lens Instructional Video

This video is approximately five minutes long and gives instructions for the use of the Morgan Lens, including showing the insertion and removal and describing the recommended uses.

An Excess of Topical Calcium and Magnesium Reverses the Therapeutic Effect of Citrate on the Development of Corneal Ulcers After an Alkali Injury

Our purpose was to determine whether chelation of Ca2+ and Mg2+ is the mechanism by which sodium citrate inhibits corneal ulceration in the alkali-injured rabbit eye.

Anhydrous Ammonia Burns Case Report and Review of the Literature

Chemical burns are associated with significant morbidity, especially anhydrous ammonia burns. Anhydrous ammonia is a colorless, pungent gas that is stored and transported under pressure in liquid form.

Aqueous Humor pH in Experimental Eye Burns and Influence of Different Treatment Measures

300 rabbit corneas were burned for – 1 minute by applying a filter paper of 10mm diameter soaked in different concentrations of NaOH. The aqueous humor pH was then measured at certain time intervals and after different treatment methods until the physiologic pH of 7.6 was reached.

The Morgan Lens Brochure

This brochure contains information about our Products, instructions on how to use them, and references and testimonials related to our products. 

Morgan Lens Instructions for Use Chart

The Morgan Lens instructions for use chart provides instructions for using the Morgan Lens continuous lavage or medication to the cornea and conjunctiva.

Military & Government Orders - Capability Statement

This Capability Statement contains information on military and government orders and relevant information regarding the past performance of the Morgan Lens.

Training Materials

A list of resources that will help in the initial training in the use for the Morgan Lens.

Online Protocols

Examples of Hospital and EMS protocols or Morgan Lens references currently available on the Internet

Morgan Lens Newsletter Sign-Up

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I just wanted to tell you that your device you gave me in San Francisco has already gone into action with great success.  A heavily infected, perforated eye, 24 hours old, with starting panophthalmitis (trauma with a wooden chip from a pork stable!) arrived yesterday.  After surgical repair I fitted your Morgan Lens and started with Chloramphenicol, Decadron in lactated Ringer's solution.  To my great astonishment, the eye today had quieted down, the patient was without any pain, and the panophthalmitis seems to have disappeared to a large extent.  I wished I could donate you an automated perimeter in return!

Physician-Ophthalmologist (Switzerland)

Why Use The Morgan Lens?

The Morgan Lens is used in 90% of hospital emergency departments in the USA and can be inserted in less than 20 seconds. There simply is no other "hands-free" method of eye irrigation. Nothing else frees medical personnel to treat other injuries or to transport the patient while irrigation is underway. Nothing is more effective at treating ocular chemical, thermal, and actinic burns or removing non-embedded foreign bodies, even when the patient's eyes are closed tightly. Its design makes it simple and straightforward to use so minimal training is required.