What should I expect before, during, and after
surgery?
What to expect
before, during, and after surgery will vary from
doctor to doctor and patient to patient. This
section is a compilation of patient information
developed by manufacturers and healthcare
professionals, but cannot replace the dialogue you
should have with your doctor. Read this information
carefully and with the checklist, discuss your
expectations with your doctor.
Before Surgery
If you decide to go ahead with LASIK surgery, you
will need an initial or baseline evaluation by your
eye doctor to determine if you are a good candidate.
This is what you need to know to prepare for the
exam and what you should expect:
If you wear
contact lenses, it is a good idea to stop
wearing them before your baseline evaluation
and switch to wearing your glasses full-time.
Contact lenses change the shape of your cornea for
up to several weeks after you have stopped using
them depending on the type of contact lenses you
wear. Not leaving your contact lenses out long
enough for your cornea to assume its natural shape
before surgery can have negative consequences. These
consequences include inaccurate measurements and a
poor surgical plan, resulting in poor vision after
surgery. These measurements, which determine how
much corneal tissue to remove, may need to be
repeated at least a week after your initial
evaluation and before surgery to make sure they have
not changed, especially if you wear RGP or hard
lenses. If you wear:
- soft contact
lenses, you should stop wearing them for 2
weeks before your initial evaluation.
- toric soft
lenses or rigid gas permeable (RGP) lenses,
you should stop wearing them for at least 3
weeks before your initial evaluation.
- hard lenses,
you should stop wearing them for at least 4
weeks before your initial evaluation.
You should tell your
doctor:
- about your past
and present medical and eye conditions
- about all the
medications you are taking, including
over-the-counter medications and any medications
you may be allergic to
Your doctor should
perform a thorough eye exam and discuss:
- whether you are
a good candidate
- what the risks,
benefits, and alternatives of the surgery are
- what you should
expect before, during, and after surgery
- what your
responsibilities will be before, during, and
after surgery
You should have the
opportunity to ask your doctor questions during this
discussion. Give yourself plenty of time to think
about the risk/benefit discussion, to review any
informational literature provided by your doctor,
and to have any additional questions answered by
your doctor before deciding to go through with
surgery and before signing the informed consent
form.
You should not feel
pressured by your doctor, family, friends, or anyone
else to make a decision about having surgery.
Carefully consider the pros and cons.
The day before
surgery, you should stop using:
- creams
- lotions
- makeup
- perfumes
These products as
well as debris along the eyelashes may increase the
risk of infection during and after surgery. Your
doctor may ask you to scrub your eyelashes for a
period of time before surgery to get rid of residues
and debris along the lashes.
Also before
surgery, arrange for transportation to and from
your surgery and your first follow-up visit. On the
day of surgery, your doctor may give you some
medicine to make you relax. Because this medicine
impairs your ability to drive and because your
vision may be blurry, even if you don't drive make
sure someone can bring you home after surgery.
During Surgery
The surgery should take less than 30 minutes. You
will lie on your back in a reclining chair in an
exam room containing the laser system. The laser
system includes a large machine with a microscope
attached to it and a computer screen.
A numbing drop will
be placed in your eye, the area around your eye will
be cleaned, and an instrument called a lid speculum
will be used to hold your eyelids open.
Your doctor may use a
mechanical microkeratome (a blade device) to cut a
flap in the cornea.
If a mechanical
microkeratome is used, a ring will be placed on your
eye and very high pressures will be applied to
create suction to the cornea. Your vision will dim
while the suction ring is on and you may feel the
pressure and experience some discomfort during this
part of the procedure. The microkeratome, a cutting
instrument, is attached to the suction ring. Your
doctor will use the blade of the microkeratome to
cut a flap in your cornea. Microkeratome blades are
meant to be used only once and then thrown out. The
microkeratome and the suction ring are then removed.
Your doctor may use a
laser keratome (a laser device), instead of a
mechanical microkeratome, to cut a flap on the
cornea.
If a laser keratome
is used, the cornea is flattened with a clear
plastic plate. Your vision will dim and you may feel
the pressure and experience some discomfort during
this part of the procedure. Laser energy is focused
inside the cornea tissue, creating thousands of
small bubbles of gas and water that expand and
connect to separate the tissue underneath the cornea
surface, creating a flap. The plate is then removed.
You will be able to
see, but you will experience fluctuating degrees of
blurred vision during the rest of the procedure. The
doctor will then lift the flap and fold it back on
its hinge, and dry the exposed tissue.
The laser will be
positioned over your eye and you will be asked to
stare at a light. This is not the laser used
to remove tissue from the cornea. This light is to
help you keep your eye fixed on one spot once the
laser comes on. NOTE: If
you cannot stare at a fixed object for at least 60
seconds, you may not be a good candidate for this
surgery.
When your eye is in
the correct position, your doctor will start the
laser. At this point in the surgery, you may become
aware of new sounds and smells. The pulse of the
laser makes a ticking sound. As the laser removes
corneal tissue, some people have reported a smell
similar to burning hair. A computer controls the
amount of laser energy delivered to your eye. Before
the start of surgery, your doctor will have
programmed the computer to vaporize a particular
amount of tissue based on the measurements taken at
your initial evaluation. After the pulses of laser
energy vaporize the corneal tissue, the flap is put
back into position.
A shield should be
placed over your eye at the end of the procedure as
protection, since no stitches are used to hold the
flap in place. It is important for you to wear this
shield to prevent you from rubbing your eye and
putting pressure on your eye while you sleep, and to
protect your eye from accidentally being hit or
poked until the flap has healed.
After Surgery
Immediately after the procedure, your eye may burn,
itch, or feel like there is something in it. You may
experience some discomfort, or in some cases, mild
pain and your doctor may suggest you take a mild
pain reliever. Both your eyes may tear or water.
Your vision will probably be hazy or blurry. You
will instinctively want to rub your eye, but don't!
Rubbing your eye could dislodge the flap, requiring
further treatment. In addition, you may experience
sensitivity to light, glare, starbursts or haloes
around lights, or the whites of your eye may look
red or bloodshot. These symptoms should improve
considerably within the first few days after
surgery. You should plan on taking a few days off
from work until these symptoms subside. You
should contact your doctor immediately and not
wait for your scheduled visit, if you experience
severe pain, or if your vision or other symptoms get
worse instead of better.
You should see your
doctor within the first 24 to 48 hours after
surgery and at regular intervals after that for at
least the first six months. At the first
postoperative visit, your doctor will remove the eye
shield, test your vision, and examine your eye. Your
doctor may give you one or more types of eye drops
to take at home to help prevent infection and/or
inflammation. You may also be advised to use
artificial tears to help lubricate the eye. Do not
resume wearing a contact lens in the operated eye,
even if your vision is blurry.
You should wait
one to three days following surgery before
beginning any non-contact sports, depending on the
amount of activity required, how you feel, and your
doctor's instructions.
To help prevent
infection, you may need to wait for up to two
weeks after surgery or until your doctor advises you
otherwise before using lotions, creams, or
make-up around the eye. Your doctor may advise you
to continue scrubbing your eyelashes for a period of
time after surgery. You should also avoid swimming
and using hot tubs or whirlpools for 1-2 months.
Strenuous contact
sports such as boxing, football, karate, etc. should
not be attempted for at least four weeks
after surgery. It is important to protect your eyes
from anything that might get in them and from being
hit or bumped.
During the first
few months after surgery, your vision may
fluctuate.
- It may take up
to three to six months for your vision to
stabilize after surgery.
- Glare, haloes,
difficulty driving at night, and other visual
symptoms may also persist during this
stabilization period. If further correction or
enhancement is necessary, you should wait until
your eye measurements are consistent for two
consecutive visits at least 3 months apart
before re-operation.
- It is important
to realize that although distance vision may
improve after re-operation, it is unlikely that
other visual symptoms such as glare or haloes
will improve.
- It is also
important to note that no laser company has
presented enough evidence for the FDA to make
conclusions about the safety or effectiveness of
enhancement surgery.
Contact your eye
doctor immediately, if you develop any new,
unusual or worsening symptoms at any point after
surgery. Such symptoms could signal a problem that,
if not treated early enough, may lead to a loss of
vision.
What
are the risks
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 are 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 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.
Other types of
refractive surgery
Radial Keratotomy or
RK and Photorefractive Keratectomy or PRK are other
refractive surgeries used to reshape the cornea. In
RK, a very sharp knife is used to cut slits in the
cornea changing its shape. PRK was the first
surgical procedure developed to reshape the cornea,
by sculpting, using a laser. Later, LASIK was
developed. The same type of laser is used for LASIK
and PRK. Often the exact same laser is used for the
two types of surgery. The major difference between
the two surgeries is the way that the stroma, the
middle layer of the cornea, is exposed before it is
vaporized with the laser. In PRK, the top layer of
the cornea, called the epithelium, is scraped away
to expose the stromal layer underneath. In LASIK, a
flap is cut in the stromal layer and the flap is
folded back.
Another type of
refractive surgery is thermokeratoplasty in which
heat is used to reshape the cornea. The source of
the heat can be a laser, but it is a different kind
of laser than is used for LASIK and PRK. Other
refractive devices include corneal ring segments
that are inserted into the stroma and special
contact lenses that temporarily reshape the cornea (orthokeratology).
Download more
information on lasik
here
Credits to the FDA
and American Association of Optometry
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