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2020 Sullivan Trail Front Office Easton, PA 18040
Mon - Fri: 9:00AM - 2:30PM Sat: Closed | Sun: Closed
Welcome to our Easton Eye Center, your destination for advanced, technology-driven ophthalmic care. Our team of experienced ophthalmologists and eye specialists provides personalized consultations and surgical solutions designed to help you achieve optimal vision. Whether you are exploring LASIK, cataract surgery, or advanced diagnostics, we are committed to delivering precise, safe, and effective treatment.
At our Easton clinic, every patient receives individualized attention. Our specialists use advanced diagnostic technology to assess your vision and eye health thoroughly, allowing us to develop tailored care plans for surgical or corrective procedures. Each consultation ensures you understand your condition, treatment options, and expected outcomes.
We offer a range of surgical and corrective services, including:
Our surgeons use the latest imaging and laser technology to deliver precise, safe, and effective results. From the initial evaluation to post-procedure guidance, every step is designed to optimize outcomes and minimize disruption to your daily life.
Staying on the cutting edge of ophthalmology is a priority at our Easton center. Our facility features advanced imaging and diagnostic tools, ensuring accurate assessments and treatment plans. Technology plays a key role in every procedure, including LASIK and cataract surgeries, for maximum precision and safety.
Patients choose OOMC Easton for our expertise, consult-based care, and commitment to superior outcomes. Our ophthalmologists combine advanced technology with personalized attention to deliver exceptional surgical and specialty eye care.
Every visit to OOMC Easton is a step toward clearer, healthier vision. Schedule a consultation to explore LASIK, cataract surgery, or advanced diagnostic evaluations. Our team is dedicated to providing expert, consult-based care with a personal and professional approach.
Contact us today to take the next step toward optimized vision and exceptional eye health.
Refractive surgery reshapes the cornea so light focuses correctly on the retina, reducing dependency on glasses and contacts and improving your vision. Today, LASIK (laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis), PRK (Photorefractive Keratotomy) and Visian ICL (Implantable Collamer Lens) can correct most degrees of nearsightedness, farsightedness and astigmatism. LASIK and other vision correction procedures offer long-lasting, life-changing results.
Glaucoma is a progressive eye disease that can eventually lead to vision loss. It can be managed with regular eye exams, early detection and treatment. When you have glaucoma, the optic nerve that carries electrical signals from your eye to your brain slowly becomes compromised, affecting your vision and potentially causing gradual blindness. It’s often hereditary or experienced by patients over 60 or of African descent, but can also develop from a past eye injury, high eye pressure or a thin cornea.
The cornea protects your inner eye against dirt, germs and ultraviolet light. When light enters your eye, it’s bent by the cornea and helps you focus. When the cornea is affected by disease, infection or injury, things just might not look right. When you’re experiencing cornea problems, you might notice pain, blurred vision, tearing, redness or an extreme sensitivity to light. Often, the cornea can heal itself after a minor infection. But sometimes, advanced issues like keratoconus, Fuchs endothelial dystrophy and dry eye syndrome require additional consultation and treatment plans.
A cataract is a clouding of the natural lens found inside the eye. When left untreated or ignored, a cataract can get worse and eventually cause vision loss and get in the way of life as you know it.
Cataracts can affect the way we see light, color and life in general. Common Cataract symptoms are blurred vision, difficulty seeing at night, halos around lights, glare, difficulty reading and frequent prescription changes for glasses. Often surgery is recommended to improve this condition as glasses, eye drops or Lasik are not helpful once a cataract has progressed in the eye.
LASIK procedures correct imperfections, or refractive errors, in the eyes’ ability to focus by using a laser to reshape the cornea. This procedure changes how the eye focuses, thereby improving vision without the need for corrective eyewear such as glasses or contact lenses. Learn More...
Approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2017, the Light Adjustable Lens is the first and only adjustable intraocular lens that can be customized to refine your vision after cataract surgery. Learn More...
According to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the amount paid for eye surgeries to correct defective vision, such as LASIK or radial keratotomy, can be included in medical expenses and deducted from taxes. Learn More...
Glaucoma refers to a group of eye conditions that damage the optic nerve, which is the nerve that connects your eye to the brain. This damage is usually caused due to abnormally high pressure in your eye (intraocular pressure). Learn More...
According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), LASIK is only approved for people aged 18 and older. There is currently no laser eye surgery that is approved for anyone younger. Learn More...
There is a common misconception that LASIK is not permanent and that it only lasts a few years. However, the reality is, LASIK can permanently correct the vision prescription of near-sightedness, farsightedness or astigmatism, that you come in with before the procedure. Learn More...