|
Wavefront
Lasik Surgery
What is wavefront lasik eye surgery?
Millions
of people have reduced their dependence on
eyeglasses and contact lenses over the past
several years with the refractive surgery
procedure known as LASIK.
This
procedure can correct refractive errors such as
nearsightedness, farsightedness and astigmatism.
Now an
enhanced version of LASIK, known as wavefront
LASIK, is available. This improved system allows
eye surgeons to customize the procedure for each
eye, providing the possibility of even better
vision.
Adapted from technology used in astronomy,
wavefront LASIK is a procedure that uses an
array of microsensors and a laser. A wave of
light from a laser beam is sent through the eye
to the retina. This light is reflected out of
the eye, and the sensor measures the
irregularities at the front of the wave of light
as it emerges from the eye.
This
produces a precise three-dimensional map of the
visual system, including the cornea's
imperfections, or aberrations. Thousands of
people have the same eyeglass prescription, but
because the map is so precise, no two people
have the same wavefront measurements.
These wavefront data are translated into a
mathematical formula the surgeon uses to program
corrections into the ultraviolet cold laser,
which vaporizes tissue to reshape the cornea.
This
new wavefront technology has a better chance of
reducing higher-order aberrations that cause
glare, haloes and blurry images. All wavefront
patients will have some higher-order aberrations
after surgery, and in fact some types of
aberration may increase. However, wavefront
technology is the best tool for quantifying
aberrations, and wavefront LASIK results in far
fewer aberrations than conventional LASIK.
Concerns about quality of vision and nighttime
glare with previous forms of LASIK prevented
many people from having their vision corrected.
In Food and Drug Administration trials, the
majority of patients who had custom LASIK found
their night vision to be better after the
procedure than it was with their glasses or
contact lenses. One FDA study showed More than
70 percent of custom LASIK patients saw better
than 20/20.
Wavefront LASIK may not be for everyone because
it removes more corneal tissue than conventional
LASIK. Patients with thin corneas, high degrees
of aberration, severely dry eyes or conditions
that affect the lens or vitreous fluid inside
the eye may not be good candidates. However,
many of these patients may still be good
candidates for conventional LASIK. Check with
your ophthalmologist, or Eye M.D., to see if
wavefront LASIK is right for you.
|