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Medsi Center for Ophthalmology in Solyanka

Company


Owners:
Medsi

Content

Owners

History

2021: Opening the center

On August 12, 2021, the Medsi group officially opened a new ophthalmology center with an operating unit in Moscow. He is located in the clinical and diagnostic center on Solyanka. Investments in the project amounted to 250 million rubles.

The area of ​ ​ the center is over 600 square meters. m Every day he will be able to receive about 50 patients. The small operating room is designed for 10 thousand operations per year, the combined excimerlaser and cavity operating room will allow more than 4 thousand surgical interventions annually.

The center will conduct wide-spectrum operational interventions on the front and back of the eye. All operations will take place within one day under local pain relief, specified in Medsi.

Medsi opened the Center for Ophthalmology for 250 million rubles

The Solyanke Ophthalmology Center is focused on providing multidisciplinary assistance in a wide range of visual pathologies: myopia, farsightedness, astigmatism, cataracts, glaucoma, retinal detachment, diabetic retinopathy, etc. The team of the center includes ophthalmologists, surgeons, anesthesiologists and other specialists in the field of diagnosis and treatment of visual diseases.

The institution purchased equipment from manufacturers such as Zeiss and Alcon. In particular, the Alcon Constellation Vision System and Zeiss VisuMax systems are installed. With the help of an excimer laser for correcting vision, the Alcon WaveLight EX-500 makes a comfortable and safe correction of vision, and the patient can return to his usual life the very next day, Medsi noted.

The center hosts:

  • Microinvasive vitreoretinal surgery;
  • Macular surgery (macular rupture, epiretinal fibrosis);
  • Retinal detachment surgery;
  • Surgery of proliferative diabetic retinopathy (including retinal detachment and vitreous hemorrhages);
  • Surgery for complications of cataract surgery (dislocations of the intraocular lens (IOL), lens and/or its fragments into the vitreous body);
  • Reconstructive eye surgery in the aftermath of eye injuries (retinal detachment, vascular detachment, submacular hemorrhage);
  • Surgery for disorders of vitreous body transparency (hemorrhages, haze);
  • Cataract surgery by microinvasive phacoemulsification with implantation of various types of intraocular lenses (IOL) (toric, multifocal).[1]

Notes