Howerton
Eye Center - Lasik Vision Correction
- Austin Texas
Are You a LASIK Candidate?
by Shawn Powell
- Austin, Texas
Before
you put you money in a medical reimbursement
account….
Before you cut corners and save your
pennies….
Before you apply for a personal loan….
ARE YOU A CANDIDATE FOR LASIK –
LASER VISION CORRECTION?
Most patients
who are able to successfully wear
glasses and contacts and are able
to see with corrective lenses will
be a candidate for LASIK. However,
there are several conditions that
can prohibit you from having LASIK
surgery and risks that may cause you
to have a poor result.
First, begin
with what type of vision can be corrected
with LASIK surgery. A person who needs
glasses or contacts has a “refractive
error”. There are four types
of refractive error myopia, hyperopia,
astigmatism and presbyopia. A person
who has perfect eyesight and lacks
a refractive error is called “emmetropic”.
In an
eye without a refractive error,
light rays enter through the
cornea and focus directly on
the retina at the back of the
eye. |
In the
myopic eye, the cornea is often
steep and light rays focus in
front of the retina, causing
distant objects to appear blurred.
|
In the
hyperopic eye, the cornea is
not steep enough and light rays
focus behind the retina.
|
With astigmatism,
the cornea has an irregular shape,
which scatters light rays and causes
both close-up and distant objects
to appear blurred.
Presbyopia
is a condition where a person progressively
loses their lens elasticity and ability
to accommodate (focus up close). This
condition affects the ability to read
at close ranges. The necessary corrective
lenses are called reading glasses.
Even people who have had perfect vision
all of their lives will develop presbyopia
in their mid-forties. The excimer
laser has no effect on your focusing
muscles. The excimer laser cannot
help patients who are experiencing
the effects of presbyopia, however,
there are new techniques being developed
for this condition. Ask your doctor
if you are a candidate for these new
procedures.
Some of the contraindications,
or conditions, for which the surgery
should be avoided:
- Keratoconus
– genetically cone-shaped
cornea.
- Pregnancy or
lactation
- Progressive
myopia – vision should be
stable at least one year prior to
having lasik surgery.
- Keloid formers
or people with autoimmune or immunodeficient
diseases.
- Presence of
cataracts.
- You must
be 18 years or older to have lasik
surgery, under present FDA guidelines.
There are other
conditions, which may affect the results
of your surgery. Should you suspect
you have any of these conditions,
consult your doctor.
- Corneal scars
from previous injuries or surgeries
(i.e. radial keratotomy)
- Diabetes can
cause abnormal healing; however,
many diabetics have had laser vision
surgery with results comparable
to those of non-diabetics.
- Use of medications.
There are medicines that can cause
corneal scarring, infiltrates, and
some interfere with healing. Consult
your doctor, he/she can tell you
if you should discontinue medications
prior to your procedure and resume
shortly after surgery.
- Large pupils
8mm or greater, this can cause significant
night glare.
Before undergoing
an eye examination for refractive
surgery, you must be out of your contact
lenses. Contact lenses alter the shape
of your cornea and can affect the
measurements necessary for having
LASIK surgery. Patients wearing soft
contact lenses should be out of their
lenses for three to seven days. Soft-toric,
Gas–permeable, and hard contact
lens wearers, in contrast, take at
least two to three weeks to stabilize
the cornea. Talk to your doctor about
your specific lenses and cornea shape.
With LASIK, is
it important to have an adequate amount
of tissue for removal for full correction.
Excessive tissue removal can result
in severe corneal instability in patients
with thin corneas or those with normal
thickness corneas with disproportionately
high prescriptions. It may be best
to under-treat and be left with some
residual myopia rather than be fully
treated with a small optical zone.
It is important to understand the
limitations of these procedures based
upon your own prescription and eye
characteristics.
Laser correction
of certain visual problems is the
most technologically advanced method
available today for reducing your
dependence on glasses and contact
lenses. The outpatient procedure can
correct nearsightedness, farsightedness,
and astigmatism by gently reshaping
the cornea of your eye with a cool,
ultraviolet beam of laser light.
It is estimated that over one million
laser procedures have been performed
in 52 countries around the world.
In fact, vision correction by laser
is expected to become the most common
procedure performed worldwide within
the next five years.
Vision correction
using the excimer laser can also dramatically
improve your quality of life. From
the simple pleasure of being able
to see the alarm clock in the morning,
to playing sports, and pursuing career-related
opportunities, many patients are able
to enjoy life with improved self-confidence
and renewed enthusiasm.
A refractive procedure
attempts to re-shape the cornea to
allow light rays to focus directly
on the retina. Myopia, hyperopia,
and astigmatism all relate to the
shape of the surface of the cornea
and are therefore correctable with
Laser Vision Correction - LASIK.
The reasons
a person may not be a candidate to
have LASIK vary greatly; however,
most doctors offer a complimentary
consultation to determine your candidacy
for LASIK. Your doctor is the best
person to determine if you are a good
candidate Laser Vision Correction
– LASIK.
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