LASIK: What You Need to Know about Eye Healing from Laser Surgery

October 29, 2009 by AMED  
Filed under Uncategorized

If our eyes were made of glass, we could fix all of them to an ideal 20-20 vision. However, our eyes are made of active cells. And as with all biological processes, each distinct eye does not display exact healing result. The unique healing progress of the patient’s eyes can’t be determined beforehand accurately. And the way the healing of the eyes progresses will affect the quality of the patient’s improvement in vision at the end. Moreover, your eye’s healing progress, regrettably is not correlated how quickly other body parts of the person heal nor can it be pre-determined by testing.

With lasik surgery there is much less variation in the healing progression of the eyes. More diverse results appear when the surface of the eye is healing in procedures such as the PRK, as opposed to LASIK where more deep tissue restoration takes place.

In LASIK, several men and women display a more calculable mending response. As the optical organ mends during the initial days or months, there is a small tendency for the eye to go back its initial state: nearsighted eyes will turn slightly back to near-sightedness again, and farsighted eyes will regress slightly back toward farsightedness. Doctors take this natural healing tendency into account, and will create a tiny over-revision initially. And because of this, most people who have undergone LASIK will experience that their eyesight have higher clarity even within the first weeks or months of the recovery period.

Some patients also exhibit a mending progression referred to as regression’, wherein the optical organs revert in visual quality to a much larger amount than is expected. These people may have excellent vision during the early healing phase, which then retrogressed into a below optimal correction. Luckily, these disappointing results can be very easily improved with additional procedure.

Extensive contact with UV light, such as from the sun or from UV tanning shops, within the starting 6 months following laser vision correction may cause some patients to suffer from regression. It is essential that patients to protect their eyes from high amounts of ultraviolet light by slipping on shades when they decide to venture out during the peak hours of sunlight during the first 24 weeks following the procedure, though small levels of sun exposure will not be harmful to your restorative period.

In case you are one of those people who enjoy various sports which involve a large amount of ultraviolet exposure: mountain sports such as snowboarding and skiing; water polo and other athletic water games; or just relaxing in the lake; it is particularly vital for you to care for your sensitive eyes by donning protective eyewear during these activities. Moreover, getting too much ultraviolet light exposure is harmful to other tissues of the optical organ, since UV light can lead to cataracts and injury to the retina. Hence, it is sensible for everyone, regardless if they have or have not during the last 6 months had excimer corrective eye surgery, to guard their eyes from the deleterious effects of sun exposure.

Before undergoing this procedure, you should be clear on the fact that everyone recovers from this operation differently, and these dissimilarities considerably shape the final result. This is one of the reasons why it’s very critical to check the eye specialist carefully. Even if the laser procedure is well recommended, it is still the doctor who will use the laser and then make critical decisions based on your eyes’ healing progress after the procedure. Most importantly, make sure you understand your after operation care instructions; so that you will do everything you can to increase your chances of achieving the best eyesight improvement possible.

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