Laser Surgery
Refractive Laser Surgery
Refractive laser surgery is any laser procedure resulting in
sculpting of the cornea to alter the refraction (bending) of light
rays into the eye. The result is eliminating or reducing the dependency
on glasses or contacts and correcting myopia, hyperopia and astigmatism.
Laser In-Situ Keratomileusis (LASIK)
LASIK has become the standard of care in refractive surgery and
is used to correct nearsightedness, farsightedness and astigmatism.
In this procedure, the surgeon creates a hinged corneal flap before
the excimer laser is applied to vaporize a small amount of corneal
surface. After the laser is used, the corneal flap is replaced,
bonding almost instantly and without stitches.
IntraLase
is the latest advancement to LASIK technology which features bladeless
flap creation. Originally, a microkeratome (rotating manual blade)
was used to create the corneal flap.
Wavefront-Guided Laser Surgery
New laser systems are constantly being approved by the Food and
Drug Administration for wavefront custom ablations. Current wavefront
approval ranges vary depending on which laser system is used by
your doctor’s laser center.
While wavefront does not guarantee perfect outcomes, it is incrementally
better than traditional laser refractive surgery. The chances
of achieving 20/20 uncorrected visual acuity after the procedure
is statistically higher with wavefront when compared to traditional
surgery. The chances of needing an enhancement are statistically
lower. An easy way to understand wavefront technology is to compare
it to custom tailoring. The laser sculpts the patient’s
prescription onto your cornea. Variable laser pulses (ablation
pattern) accomplish the sculpting for different prescriptions.
For example, myopic patients receive more pulses centrally than
peripherally and patients with astigmatism receive more pulses
along the steep meridian compared to the flat meridian of their
cornea.
The only difference between wavefront and traditional laser refractive
laser surgery is how the laser/computer calculates and applies
the ablation pattern. The ablation pattern is customized based
on your prescription and the presence of higher-order aberrations
(HOAs). HOAs are alterations/imperfections in the visual system.
The way to determine the degree and type of HOA is to measure
with a special instrument called an aberometer. While all patients
should benefit to some degree from wavefront custom ablations,
the patients who should benefit the most are those who possess
more significant HOAs.
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