| |

LASIK Dangers
Posted by: "Muhammad Masry"
massrii@yahoo.com massrii
Tue Mar 18, 2008 9:09 am
(PDT)
Lasik Surgery: When the
Fine Print Applies to You
By Abby Ellin on March 15,
2008
Health Warnings
I WAS vain.
That’s the only way I can
explain why I willingly let
a doctor cut my corneas with
a laser: vanity.
Little did I know when I
chose Lasik surgery that I
would not end up satisfied
like the friends and
acquaintances who raved
about their post-glasses
existence. Instead, my days
are complicated, since I am
dealing with side effects
that are far more bothersome
than being unfashionably
four-eyed.
I had been wearing
eyeglasses since I was 8,
and I was tired of never
seeing the stars without
glare, of not being able to
go rock-climbing unless I
secured my glasses. Not to
mention the horn-rimmed
barrier between me and a
date.
I had trouble figuring out
which side of a contact lens
to stick onto my eye, so I
never really gave contacts a
chance.
I had been considering Lasik
— short for laser-assisted
in situ keratomileusis,
which entails cutting and
reshaping the cornea — since
the Food and Drug
Administration approved it
in the late ’90s. Because I
was not too nearsighted and
not too old,
ophthalmologists told me I
was an excellent candidate.
But I wanted to wait until
more people had gone under
the laser.
Roughly 800,000 patients
have had Lasik annually
since 2000, spending about
$2.5 billion on the
procedure every year, said
David Harmon, the president
of Market Scope, a research
company for the ophthalmic
industry in Manchester, Mo.
The American Society of
Cataract and Refractive
Surgery reports a
95.4-percent patient
satisfaction rate for Lasik,
based on a recent analysis
of research worldwide. The
researchers found 19 studies
specifically addressing
patient satisfaction from
the last decade,
encompassing roughly 2,022
patients. (Some had been
post-op for a month; others
for a decade).
Most ophthalmologists are
confident about the efficacy
of Lasik, as well as another
popular procedure —
photorefractive keratectomy,
or P.R.K. Both are designed
to correct nearsightedness,
farsightedness and
astigmatism.
“It’s very few people who
don’t have a superb outcome,
especially with the new
technology,” said Dr.
Marguerite McDonald, the
president of the
International Society of
Refractive Surgery of the
American Academy of
Ophthalmology.
About five of my friends had
undergone the surgery.
“Life-changing,” they cooed.
“Miraculous!” Because my
40th birthday was looming,
my parents offered me either
a cello or Lasik. I chose
Lasik. But first, I looked
up studies online and
consulted three doctors.
Each did a spate of tests
and pronounced me an
excellent candidate.
I asked about the risks, and
they explained that some
people come away with dry
eye, double vision,
decreased contrast
sensitivity and decreased
night vision. Some see halos
around lights. I was assured
these side effects were
rare, and usually fleeting.
Ultimately, I chose Dr.
Sandra Belmont, the founding
director of the Laser Vision
Correction Center at
NewYork-Presbyteria n
Hospital/Weill Cornell
Medical Center. Dr. Belmont
also runs a corneal
fellowship program at
Manhattan Eye, Ear and
Throat Hospital.
A doctor who was a patient
of hers recommended her. She
charges between $4,500 and
$5,500; I paid $4,500,
nearly $1,000 less than
other quotes I had received,
a consideration since my
insurance, like most, does
not cover elective surgery.
I signed a consent form
confirming that I understood
the risks. I thought I did
understand them. I did not
know then that 5 to 10
percent of patients need to
have their vision fine-tuned
— or in industry parlance,
“enhanced” — after surgery
because of an under- or
over-correction, according
to John Ciccone, a spokesman
for the American Society of
Cataract and Refractive
Surgery.
Nor had I spoken to any
individuals who wished they
had never had the procedure
— of which, I have since
learned, there are plenty.
On April 13, 2007, I had the
surgery. Dr. Belmont’s
colleague examined me the
next day. My vision was a
little blurry, but
apparently that was normal.
Dr. Belmont said that
everything looked good on
subsequent visits, too. But
the blurriness never went
away.
At night, I saw halos around
streetlights; neon signs
bled; the moon had two rings
around it like Saturn. My
eyes felt sore, a result of
dry eye, which also causes
sporadic blurriness.
Dr. Belmont told me that
sometimes women of a certain
age who are undergoing
hormonal changes or who take
certain medications get dry
eye. It would have been nice
if I’d known my advanced age
(39) might be problematic
before I sat in the chair.
I cut out all prescription
and nonprescription pills.
Didn’t help. The doctor told
me to use Refresh Plus,
over-the-counter drops that
temporarily help dry eye.
The drops cost around $12 a
box; I go through two boxes
a week. She also prescribed
Restasis eye drops, which
can help increase tear
production. They didn’t for
me.
True, I no longer wear
glasses. But the 20/20 line
on the eye chart is blurry.
I can make it out only if I
squint, and it takes about a
minute to read. My doctor
views this as proof of the
surgery’s success.
“I do see it as a success,”
Dr. Belmont told me in a
recent interview. She also
has said repeatedly that
these troubles will pass.
“In 18 years of practice,
I’ve never had a patient
whose symptoms don’t go
away. Most patients take
three to six months to
heal.”
But I see my slow-squint
reading as a sign of
failure. I thought I’d be
able to decipher words in
the real world at a glance.
My consent form said: “The
patient understands that the
benefit of the Lasik/P.R.K.
procedure is to have an
improved uncorrected visual
acuity.” I took that to mean
that my eyesight would be
20/20. Most doctors, on the
other hand, focus on the
words “improved uncorrected
visual acuity.”
“Not every patient has the
potential to see 20/20,” Dr.
Belmont told me this month.
So, if your eye can see
20/20 with glasses or
contacts, the doctors try to
replicate that, but there
are no guarantees. Dr.
Belmont said, “You do the
best that you can.”
On its Web site (www.fda.gov/
cdrh/lasik/ risks.htm) , the
F.D.A. cautions patients to
“Be wary of eye centers that
advertise ‘20/20 vision or
your money back’ or ‘package
deals.’ ” (Still, some
refractive eye surgeons’
phone numbers end in 2020.)
Nearly a year later, my
problems remain. Still, I’m
not mad at my doctor. I’m
mad at myself. No one forced
me to do it. In our
quick-fix culture, we forget
that there are risks with
any surgery, elective or
not.
Between 1998 and 2006 the
F.D.A. received 140 negative
reports relating to Lasik,
including double vision, dry
eye and halos, said Mary
Long, a spokeswoman.
Granted, this is not that
many, but Ms. Long said, “If
this many people are
responding to an adverse
event, there are probably
others who are not.”
After concluding that too
few well-designed studies
have examined quality of
life after Lasik, the F.D.A.
put together a task force in
2006 to design a clinical
trial to explore the
subject. A pilot study is
now under way at the
National Eye Institute in
Bethesda, Md.
LOOKING back, I do not think
my doctor and the other
experts I consulted
adequately represented the
pitfalls. It’s one thing to
say that dry eye is
“annoying,” as Dr. Belmont
did; it’s another to explain
how feeling as if your eyes
are coated in Vaseline may
make every waking moment a
chore.
Perhaps it depends on what
your definition of success
is.
You May Also Want to Read:
TeenageWaistland. com
Potential Long Term Dangers
Of LASIK Surgery
How To Reduce Eyestrain And
Promote Optimal Vision
Why Frequent Blinking Is
Essential For Healthy Eyes
And Optimal Vision
“People say, ‘Well, you
don’t wear glasses anymore,’
” said Barbara Berney, 53,
of Rockford, Ill., who had
the surgery in 2001 and now
reports dry eye, night
blindness, dimmed vision,
halos and starbursts.
“Unless you see what I see,
you have no frame of
reference.”
Unhappy Lasik patients, some
with worse experiences than
mine (one man I spoke to
needed a corneal
transplant), have created
about a dozen Web sites. The
12 patients I talked with
all reported feeling as I
did, gaslighted. They said
they kept telling their
doctors that they couldn’t
see, and that their doctors
kept telling them that they
could.
A few doctors have told me
that they think they can
help my dry eye, but I worry
they will suggest more
surgery, and I haven’t gone
to see them. A few
optometrists said they could
fit me with special lenses
to moisten my eyes, and I
may have to go that route.
Meanwhile, I walk by
eyeglass shops and wish I
needed to go inside.
***
Note from Ben Kim:
This article was originally
published on March 13, 2008
in The New York Times. Many
thanks to Abby Ellin for
graciously allowing us to
share her article with our
readers. To learn more about
Abby's work, including her
book on childhood obesity,
please visit:
TeenageWaistland. com.
For information on the
potential long term dangers
of Lasik surgery, please
feel free to view:
Potential Long Term Dangers
of LASIK Surgery
To discover simple eye
exercises that you can begin
using immediately to promote
better vision naturally,
please feel free to view the
following articles:
How to Reduce Eyestrain and
Promote Optimal Vision
Why Frequent Blinking is
Essential for Healthy Eyes
and Optimal Vision
Muhammad Ahmad Al-Masry
64, Muhammad Korayem Street,
Gomrok, Alexandria, Egypt
Tel: 0020-03-4800555
Fax: 0020-03-3082667
Web: massrii@yahoo. com
massrii@hotmail. co
www.cidpusa.org
www.cidpusa.org/P/ivig.htm
http://www.cidpusa.org/disease.html
http://www.cidpusa.org/Lahore.html
http://www.cidpusa.org/FMS%20CFS.html
http://www.cidpusa.org/fibromyalgia.html
http://www.cidpusa.org/FMS%20CFS.html Home to
autoimmune diseases,
Everything
about IVIg,
Autoimmune diseases
cure
Top clinic that cures
cancer and autoimmune diseases,
Cure of Fibromyalgia,
Cure
of Chronic Fatigue syndrome & Fibromyalgia,
Myofacial
Pain the most common pain disorder in the world
|
|
|
|
|
|
|