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Lasik
Risks
What are
the risks and how can I find the right doctor
for me?
Most patients are very pleased with the results
of their refractive surgery. However, like any
other medical procedure, there are risks
involved. That's why it is important for you to
understand the limitations and possible
complications of refractive surgery.
Before undergoing a refractive procedure, you
should carefully weigh the risks and benefits
based on your own personal value system, and try
to avoid being influenced by friends that have
had the procedure or doctors encouraging you to
do so.
Some patients lose vision. Some patients lose
lines of vision on the vision chart that cannot
be corrected with glasses, contact lenses, or
surgery as a result of treatment.
Some patients develop debilitating visual
symptoms. Some patients develop glare, halos,
and/or double vision that can seriously affect
nighttime vision. Even with good vision on the
vision chart, some patients do not see as well
in situations of low contrast, such as at night
or in fog, after treatment as compared to before
treatment.
You may be under treated or over treated. Only a
certain percent of patients achieve 20/20 vision
without glasses or contacts. You may require
additional treatment, but additional treatment
may not be possible. You may still need glasses
or contact lenses after surgery. This may be
true even if you only required a very weak
prescription before surgery. If you used reading
glasses before surgery, you may still need
reading glasses after surgery.
Some patients may develop severe dry eye
syndrome. As a result of surgery, your eye may
not be able to produce enough tears to keep the
eye moist and comfortable. Dry eye not only
causes discomfort, but can reduce visual quality
due to intermittent blurring and other visual
symptoms. This condition may be permanent.
Intensive drop therapy and use of plugs or other
procedures may be required.
Results are generally not as good in patients
with very large refractive errors of any type.
You should discuss your expectations with your
doctor and realize that you may still require
glasses or contacts after the surgery.
For some farsighted patients, results may
diminish with age. If you are farsighted, the
level of improved vision you experience after
surgery may decrease with age. This can occur if
your manifest refraction (a vision exam with
lenses before dilating drops) is very different
from your cycloplegic refraction (a vision exam
with lenses after dilating drops).
Long-term data is not available. LASIK is a
relatively new technology. The first laser was
approved for LASIK eye surgery in 1998.
Therefore, the long-term safety and
effectiveness of LASIK surgery is not known.
Additional Risks if you are Considering the
Following:
Monovision
Monovision is one clinical technique used to
deal with the correction of presbyopia, the
gradual loss of the ability of the eye to change
focus for close-up tasks that progresses with
age. The intent of monovision is for the
presbyopic patient to use one eye for distance
viewing and one eye for near viewing. This
practice was first applied to fit contact lens
wearers and more recently to LASIK and other
refractive surgeries. With contact lenses, a
presbyopic patient has one eye fit with a
contact lens to correct distance vision, and the
other eye fit with a contact lens to correct
near vision. In the same way, with LASIK, a
presbyopic patient has one eye operated on to
correct the distance vision, and the other
operated on to correct the near vision. In other
words, the goal of the surgery is for one eye to
have vision worse than 20/20, the commonly
referred to goal for LASIK surgical correction
of distance vision. Since one eye is corrected
for distance viewing and the other eye is
corrected for near viewing, the two eyes no
longer work together. This results in poorer
quality vision and a decrease in depth
perception. These effects of monovision are most
noticeable in low lighting conditions and when
performing tasks requiring very sharp vision.
Therefore, you may need to wear glasses or
contact lenses to fully correct both eyes for
distance or near when performing visually
demanding tasks, such as driving at night,
operating dangerous equipment, or performing
occupational tasks requiring very sharp close
vision (e.g., reading small print for long
periods of time).
Many patients cannot get used to having one eye
blurred at all times. Therefore, if you are
considering monovision with LASIK, make sure you
go through a trial period with contact lenses to
see if you can tolerate monovision, before
having the surgery performed on your eyes. Find
out if you pass your state's driver's license
requirements with monovision.
In addition, you should consider how much your
presbyopia is expected to increase in the
future. Ask your doctor when you should expect
the results of your monovision surgery to no
longer be enough for you to see near-by objects
clearly without the aid of glasses or contacts,
or when a second surgery might be required to
further correct your near vision.
Bilateral Simultaneous Treatment
You may choose to have LASIK surgery on both
eyes at the same time or to have surgery on one
eye at a time. Although the convenience of
having surgery on both eyes on the same day is
attractive, this practice is riskier than having
two separate surgeries.
If you decide to have one eye done at a time,
you and your doctor will decide how long to wait
before having surgery on the other eye. If both
eyes are treated at the same time or before one
eye has a chance to fully heal, you and your
doctor do not have the advantage of being able
to see how the first eye responds to surgery
before the second eye is treated.
Another disadvantage to having surgery on both
eyes at the same time is that the vision in both
eyes may be blurred after surgery until the
initial healing process is over, rather than
being able to rely on clear vision in at least
one eye at all times.
Finding the Right Doctor
If you are considering refractive surgery, make
sure you:
Compare. The levels of risk and benefit vary
slightly not only from procedure to procedure,
but from device to device depending on the
manufacturer, and from surgeon to surgeon
depending on their level of experience with a
particular procedure.
Don't base your decision simply on cost and
don't settle for the first eye center, doctor,
or procedure you investigate. Remember that the
decisions you make about your eyes and
refractive surgery will affect you for the rest
of your life.
Be wary of eye centers that advertise, "20/20
vision or your money back" or "package deals."
There are never any guarantees in medicine.
Read. It is important for you to read the
patient handbook provided to your doctor by the
manufacturer of the device used to perform the
refractive procedure. Your doctor should provide
you with this handbook and be willing to discuss
his/her outcomes (successes as well as
complications) compared to the results of
studies outlined in the handbook.
Even the best screened patients under the care
of most skilled surgeons can experience serious
complications.
During surgery. Malfunction of a device or other
error, such as cutting a flap of cornea through
and through instead of making a hinge during
LASIK surgery, may lead to discontinuation of
the procedure or irreversible damage to the eye.
After surgery. Some complications, such as
migration of the flap, inflammation or
infection, may require another procedure and/or
intensive treatment with drops. Even with
aggressive therapy, such complications may lead
to temporary loss of vision or even irreversible
blindness.
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