CATARACT SURGERY
A Patient's Guide To Cataract Treatment
by Robert K. Maloney, M.D, Inc. Addicus books Omaha, Nebraska
Causes and Risk Factors

Traumatic Cataracts

Eye injuries, caused by sharp objects or a direct blow to the eye, can cause traumatic cataracts. Traumatic cataracts may also form as a result of a head injury near the eye, earlier eye surgery, eye inflammation, chemical burns, and electric shock.
Some scientists consider radiation a form of "slow trauma" that contributes to cataract development. Overexposure to radiation can come from numerous sources, including:

. Sunlight (ultraviolet light), which is most intense at the equator and accounts for a higher incidence of cataracts among inhabitants of lower latitudes. (Researchers expect this problem to worsen with continued depletion of the ozone layer.)

. Cosmic radiation, which particularly affects commercial airline pilots and astronauts

. Infrared (heat) radiation, usually as a result of prolonged occupational exposure (by glassblowers, for example-hence the term glassblower's cataract)

. Intense artificial light, such as that used in arc welding

. Radiation therapy near the eye