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Is LASIK Surgery Right for You? Part I

Hot Tip! The laser used is a cool one LASIK uses an excimer laser, which is a cool beam of very tightly focused ultraviolet light. There’s no possibility of heat hurting your eyes.

LASIK vision correction surgery is advertised everywhere. The essential requirements of any surgical intervention are safety, effectiveness and predictability and LASIK is certainly being sold as right for you on all three counts.

FDA-approved and constantly being improved by advances in laser technology, who wouldn’t be tempted by the prospect of never having to wear contact lenses or eye glasses again? However, appealing as this might sound, LASIK surgery might not be right for you.

Hot Tip! There are certain jobs or profession which prohibit an employee undergoing LASIK eye surgery.

Understanding LASIK Surgery.

LASIK is the acronym of laser in situ keratomileusis. It is a surgical procedure fundamentally different from surface-based techniques, such as photorefractive keratectomy, where the laser beam is applied directly to the surface of the cornea after the layer of surface cells (epithelium) has been removed.

In LASIK, by contrast, a thin hinged flap of the cornea is created and lifted to one side in order to allow direct laser treatment to the deeper part of the cornea (stroma). The corneal flap is repositioned after the excimer ablation (removal of tissue) has been completed. This is the technique referred to as “flap and zap”.

No stitches are required and the flap usually settles into position within 3-5 minutes. Topical drops are applied to the eye which is then covered by a pad or shield. Reassuringly, although a very fine surgical blade is used to make the incision, anaesthetic eye drops are administered and the procedure is usually painless. Most people experience only a sensation of fullness or mild pressure within the eye.

Hot Tip! While you investigate, don’t lose sight of the benefits: for most people a lifetime of bad vision can be cured in 5 minutes. LASIK eye surgery has improved the eyesight of millions of people around the world.

Although treatment involves cutting into the deeper part of the cornea, LASIK is painless compared to the greater discomfort experienced post-PRK surgery. The pain results from the large abrasion of the corneal surface which occurs in the PRK procedure.

It seems paradoxical but the LASIK procedure which is used to treat more severe forms of myopia (shortsightedness), hyperopia (farsightedness) and astigmatism involves less discomfort than a procedure designed to correct milder forms of these eye disorders. The relative painlessness of LASIK might well be the deciding factor which helps you decide the procedure is right for you.

Hot Tip! Expect to see very well after LASIK, but don’t expect to see perfectly. Each patient gets a slightly different result.

Deciding on LASIK Surgery.

Two major factors have to be taken into account when considering if LASIK surgery is right for you: affordability and suitability.

Looking at affordability first, this type of eye surgery is categorized as a non-essential or cosmetic procedure. Accordingly, many health insurance plans won’t provide coverage. As your eyes are a very precious asset you will want to ensure that only a skilled and very experienced ophthalmologist carries out the surgery. Such skills do not come cheap and you are looking at a cost of several thousand dollars - per eye!

Even if you don’t find the cost prohibitively expensive it could be that you aren’t a suitable candidate for the procedure, and the eye doctor will decide that LASIK isn’t right for you. Before your doctor visit you should check out the following:

Hot Tip! There’s no guarantee of 20/20 vision Many people do achieve 20/20 vision after a LASIK surgery. But a good eye surgeon does not guarantee it.

  • Are your eyes healthy? Infection, glaucoma, cataracts and dry eye would preclude your having surgery as your postoperative healing would be compromised.

  • Do you have a degenerative condition or a disease of the immune system? If so, you would not be considered a candidate for LASIK as an individual’s healing characteristics are one of the two major factors determining a successful outcome. The magnitude of the attempted correction is the other important factor.

  • Your vision must be stable for at least a year before surgery. Long-term wearing of contact lenses, hard and soft, can alter the shape of the cornea. Sufficient time, sometimes up to a few months, needs to elapse before surgery can proceed.

    Hot Tip! Ask for information on your doctor’s LASIK eye surgery complication rates. If your doctor won’t tell you, find another one.

  • Are you pregnant or nursing? If so, you’ll need to wait until your hormone levels are normalised before going ahead. Hormonal levels can affect the shape of the eye.
  • In summary, then, if the procedure is affordable and you can meet the eligibility criteria, LASIK surgery might be right for you and could be a good option to pursue. With a very high success rate, it’s probably a good idea to go ahead with this relatively painless procedure.

    The next section will review the different types of LASIK surgery that are available along with the possible risks and complications of each procedure.

    © 2006 Maureen P Cook
    Maureen Cook writes articles for
    publication from her home in England. She shows you
    how to decide whether LASIK surgery is right for you.
    To read more, go to Vision
    Surgery

    Hot Tip! If your level of nearsightedness is more than -11 or so, implantable lenses will probably offer better vision than LASIK. Consider waiting until the new lenses are available.
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