Find all the Morgan Lens resources you are looking for.
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.
A list of resources that will help in the initial training in the use for the Morgan Lens.
Adaptable protocol policy and competency exam that your organization can use to define how work is performed and evaluated.
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.
This PowerPoint Presentation covers uses and instructions for using the Morgan Lens. Speaker notes are included in the downloaded version. Click the button below to download.
The Morgan Lens instructions for use chart provides instructions for using the Morgan Lens continuous lavage or medication to the cornea and conjunctiva.
Although most offices have the supplies and equipment necessary to treat an ocular chemical burn, they may not be easy to find in the event of an emergency. As such events are fairly rare, protocols are often lacking and office staff may not be prepared. This article provides concrete information on how to develop a systematic approach for treating a chemically-burned patient.
Despite following standard treatment, Pseudomonas keratitis can continue to progress and result in loss of vision or eye. Therefore, rapid containment of aggressive and refractory infection is imperative. Our cases demonstrate that Morgan Lens can be an effective topical antibiotic delivery vehicle in cases of advanced keratitis.
Chemische und thermische Augenverletzungen sind für einen kleinen aber wichtigen Teil der Okular Traumata verantwortlich. Die Schnelligkeit, mit der die Augenspülung beginnt, hat großen Einfluss auf die Prognose und Ergebnis der Augenverätzung. Normalerweise wird Wasser zur Augenspülung empfohlen.
To test the hypothesis that ocular irrigation with warm saline solution is more comfortable than irrigation with room temperature saline solution in normal volunteers.
To evaluate two solutions, lactated Ringer’s (LR) and a balanced salt solution (BSS Plus, Alcon Laboratories, Ft. Worth, TX), compared with normal saline solution (NSS), for ocular irrigation in healthy adult volunteers with and without the Morgan Lens.
The Efficacy of Calcium Gluconate in Ocular Hydrofluoric Acid Burns
The Morgan Lens* was designed as a sterile disposable scleral contact lens which provides ocular lavage and medication to the conjunctiva and cornea.
Two cases of chronic Stevens-Johnson’s disease are presented: one treated by the older method of blepharoplasty, the other treated by rehydration of the cornea with the Morgan ® Therapeutic [medi-FLOW®] Lens and a vinyl headband.
The toxicity of D-lactate has been recognized for almost 30 years. This compound is found in the racemic mixture of lactated Ringer’s solutions routinely used for peritoneal dialysis and the resuscitation of trauma victims.
Chemical burns to the eye are among the most urgent of ocular emergencies. The clinical outcome of the injury is directly related to the expediency with which treatment is begun.
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The Oslo University Eye Department has used the Morgan Lens for 16 years. We use it in all emergency cases and find that it gives the patients better chances than without this equipment. In fact, we have reduced the need for hospitalization for more than one night for these patients, and the recovery without scars and permanent loss of visions is far better than without it. Usually, we don't give our recommendations for products like this, but we have been so happy with the Morgan Lens that we would like to recommend it to all ophthalmologists. Their patients will benefit from its use.
Physician-Ophthalmologist (Norway)
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.