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Question of the week
I've talked with several different laser
centers, and it seems all of them have different machines, and each
claims that their machine is the best. Why aren't all lasers the same?
For the same reason that all TVs are not the same, or all cars are
not the same. All excimer lasers that are used in the United States must
be approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but they are of
varying quality. The top quality lasers are the WaveLight Allegretto,
Visx Star S4, and Alcon Ladar6000. We have used each of these lasers,
but by far the most accurate results are obtained with the WaveLight
Allegretto laser. Lower quality lasers (like the Nidek or Summit Apex)
do not produce the same level of accuracy of results. These budget
lasers cost less money to buy and to maintain and are often used by
discount centers.
Everyone seems to be talking about Custom treatment. What does this
mean?
Custom technology is a major advance in vision correction. Glasses
and contact lenses correct each eye with one prescription for the entire
eye in order to correct nearsightedness, farsightedness, and
astigmatism. But we know that the eye is not perfectly regular, and that
different points on the eye actually focus the light differently. Custom
technology allows us to measure and treat different locations on the eye
with different prescriptions, which cannot be done with glasses or
contact lenses. The result is often vision that is better than can be
obtained with glasses or contact lenses.
I had Lasik 6 months ago at another center, and now notice patterns
around lights with my nighttime vision. Does this happen to everyone who
has Lasik?
These patterns around lights, called glare or halos, are common to
some degree in all people - including those who have never had laser
vision correction. To demonstrate this for yourself, simply look at a
full moon, and you will notice that there is a small glow or fuzziness
around the edge of the image. It is an inherent part of vision, and most
people simply accept it as normal. Immediately after laser vision
correction, the glare is usually more pronounced, and in a different
pattern, than the glare experienced before the procedure. Typically,
this dramatically decreases over a 3-6 month period. For those people
who experience this, it is generally something they notice, but not
something that interferes with their lifestyle. Glare/halos are more
common in 1) laser vision patients with very large pupils, in particular
those whose pupils are larger than the treatment area of the laser; 2)
patients with very large degrees of correction; 3) treatments with older
laser technology. This effect is greatly diminished with the newer laser
technologies, which allow treatment zones that are larger than all but
the largest pupils. With the newer lasers, 11% of patients say that
their nighttime driving ability is now significantly better than it was
with their glasses or contacts, 1% say that it is now significantly
worse than it was with their glasses or contacts, and the remaining 88%
say that night driving after laser vision correction is about the same
as it was with their glasses or contacts. We will carefully evaluate
your pupil size in 3 different light levels during our Pre-Lasik
evaluation, and will provide you with the treatment that is most likely
to result in the best daytime and nighttime vision for you.
Can Lasik correct my reading vision?
Lasik alters the shape of the cornea, which is the clear tissue in
the very front of the eye. The need for reading glasses that comes as we
get older (known as presbyopia) is a result of the aging of the lens
deep inside the eye, behind the colored part of the eye. So Lasik cannot
correct presbyopia. However, Lasik can be used to create monovision,
just as glasses or contact lenses do, in which one eye is adjusted for
distance and one for near. Many people have monovision with their
contact lenses and prefer it to the alternative of using reading
glasses. We can produce the same effects with Lasik. If you are
considering monovision, we highly recommend that you try it first (we do
this as part of our routine laser vision consultation).
For more information about monovision, please click here.
I wear rigid contact lenses, and have been told that I will have to
wear glasses for a few weeks before I can have Lasik. I hate the feel of
my lenses, but I LOVE the vision I get from them. Why is it necessary
for me to go without them for so long before surgery?
Contact lenses can alter the shape of your cornea, and cause corneal
swelling. Prior to performing the laser treatment, we perform
measurements that need to be very exact. So, we must allow adequate time
out of contacts to be sure that our measurements of the cornea are as
precise as possible. We ask our patients to remain out of their soft
contact lenses for 7-10 days before the final measurements. If the soft
lenses are toric, then they should take out their contacts two weeks
before the final measurements. With gas permeable lenses, the patient
needs to discontinue their use for a much longer period of time. We use
the safe, conservative rule of thumb: one month of gas permeable lens
discontinuation for every decade of gas permeable lens use. (During this
time you can wear soft lenses.) So, if you've been using your gas
permeable lenses for 20 years, you will need to stay out of them for 2
months. We also recommend coming in for a progress check every 2-4 weeks
during this process to check on your corneal condition.
To see answers to more questions about laser vision
correction,
please click here.
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