Pre-operative pupil optimization platform

Better dilation before the cataract case begins.

Pupillo™ is a compact, patient-worn device used with standard dilating drops to help enhance and sustain pharmacological mydriasis before ophthalmic examination or surgery.

Patient-wornPre-op use
Spectacle-mountedSmall LED module
Doctor-focusedCataract-first launch
Pupillo cataract surgery marketing visual

The problem

A small pupil can turn a routine cataract case into a stressful case.

Good pupil dilation gives the surgeon a wider working window for capsulorhexis, lens manipulation and visualization.

But in many real-world patients, dilation may be inadequate or may fade during the case. Pupillo is designed to prepare the pupil earlier, before the patient reaches the operating room.

Workflow

Drops. Pupillo. Surgery-ready dilation.

Drops plus Pupillo workflow diagram
1

Apply drops

Standard pharmacological dilation protocol.

2

Wear Pupillo

Patient wears the spectacle-mounted device in advance.

3

Light modulation

Controlled wavelengths support the dilation response.

4

Operate

Goal: more sustained dilation during the case.

Visual story

Built around how cataract surgery actually flows

Patient wearing Pupillo preoperatively

Pre-op area

Patient wears Pupillo before surgery, not the doctor.

Pupil dilation comparison timeline

Sustained dilation

Designed to extend and enhance pharmacological mydriasis.

Cataract surgery visualization diagram

Cataract focus

Created for the visualization demands of cataract surgery.

Pupillo product render

Compact design

Small spectacle-mounted LED module for clinical workflow.

Cataract-first positioning

Pre-operative pupil optimization without adding intraoperative complexity.

  • Designed to support larger and more sustained pharmacological dilation
  • May reduce reliance on intraoperative pupil expansion rings
  • May reduce need for additional intraoperative mydriatic medications
  • Fits into standard pre-operative dilation workflow
  • Premium innovation story for modern cataract practices