Posts Tagged cataract and refractive surgery

A Surgeon’s Reasons for Seeking Lasik Eye Surgery

What are your reasons for thinking about Lasik surgery now and what are your concerns?  Many people that have been nearsighted since childhood dream of the freedom of being without glasses.  Although people become accustomed to wearing glasses or contact lenses, at its core, it is never a totally natural thing to do.  I started wearing glasses in the 4th grade and contact lenses in junior high.  By the time I was an adult, it was just a subconscious part of my daily routine.  As I grew up, my vision became worse until I couldn’t even see the alarm clock in the morning when I woke up.  It wasn’t until I personally had Lasik myself in my 30’s that I fully realized what a handicap it was.  I look back and remember all of the hassles with my inability to fully participate in simple activities that others took for granted.  When I went swimming, I would have to go without my contacts and be essentially blind, or wear glasses which hampered swimming.  Sports were always difficult because of sweat pouring onto the glasses and visual problems due to movement of the contacts.  And I remember so many times losing a contact lens and crawling around on the floor desperately trying to find it.

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Custom Lasik does not mean Blade-free Lasik

I hear some Lasik surgeons talking up the fact that they do advanced Custom Lasik but they make no mention of the blades that they use in their Lasik surgery.  That’s right, “Custom Lasik” and “Blade-free Lasik” are two completely separate things.  Surgeons that continue to use the cheap bladed Lasik try to cover that fact by talking about their Custom Lasik but that is old news at Suson Eye Specialists in Wauwatosa.  I don’t think there’s a Lasik center in the USA that doesn’t use a Custom Lasik system and it’s been that way for years.  But the real technological difference has been in the advancement of the blade-free Lasik systems to make the Lasik flap.  That’s the technological advancement that these cheap chain centers neglect and that they always fail to mention.  So they cover it up by talking about Custom Lasik so you won’t know that they still use blades.

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Lasik Eye Trackers, Iris Registration, and Decentration.

In the early days of laser refractive surgery, the laser systems were relatively simple.  The laser energy was produced in a relatively circular simple pattern which expanded outward.  The surgeon maintained control of the treatment alignment manually while using an aiming reticle viewed through the surgical microscope.  In those days, if a patient had excessive movement or oscillation of their eye, it could be quite challenging to maintain proper centration of the laser treatment.  It is always best to maintain perfect centration of treatment in order to obtain the best optical results. Any significant deviation from center can lead to suboptimal results and even induced astigmatism or other optical aberrations.  Decentration and related optical aberrations were actually a rare but important complication after Lasik or PRK in its early days.  Innovations in technology have reduced their incidence considerably, however.

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Treatment of Astigmatism in Cataract and Refractive Surgery

Treating Astigmatism in Cataract and Refractive Surgery

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Premium IOLS: the Basics

Premium Intraocular Lenses: The Basics

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Cutting Edge Technology

I had the chance to attend the largest meeting of Lasik and Cataract surgeons in the country early this April. The American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS) met this month in April. This meeting is always a great one for exchanging new ideas, techniques, and technologies from around the world. There were well known surgeons and scientists from as far away as India that presented their thoughts and techniques on various topics.

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