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

Anhydrous Ammonia Burns Case Report and Review of the Literature (1)

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.

An Excess of Topical Calcium and Magnesium Reverses the Therapeutic Effect of Citrate on the Development of Corneal Ulcers After an Alkali Injury (1)

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.

Pediatric Use of the Morgan Lens

The Morgan Lens has been used on children as young as six months of age.  Pediatricians have often reported that the child often will fall asleep once irrigation is started and the irrigating solution begins to soothe the injured eye.  Even adults find it difficult to fight the body’s natural reflex action and they try to squeeze the injured eye shut.

Fact Sheet - Treating Ocular Chemical Burns

This fact sheet contains information on the treatment of ocular chemical burns.

Fact Sheet - Pediatric Use of the Morgan Lens

This fact sheet contains information regarding the pediatric use of the Morgan Lens.

Fact Sheet - Ocular Irrigation Solutions

Patient tolerability to an irrigating solution allows for the prolonged irrigation necessary to properly treat ocular chemical burns.

Fact Sheet - Buffer Solutions in Ocular Irrigation

This fact sheet contains information on buffer solutions, how they work, and why they are better for eye irrigation.

The Morgan Lens for emergency eye irrigation

This video is a little over 2 minutes long and gives instructions for the use of the Morgan Lens, including showing the insertion and removal and describing the recommended uses.

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A 37-year-old man was arrested by the NYPD and in the struggle, mace was sprayed into his eyes. The patient was also cocaine intoxicated.  He was thrashing about so violently that we could not effectively irrigate his eyes with IV tubing, nor with the nasal cannula (attached to IV tubing) straddling his nose. The Morgan Lens worked beautifully.

Physician (New York)

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.