>I am a 54-year-old woman with symptoms of a cataract in my right eye,
>resulting from a vitrectomy and epiretinal peel last January (which
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>problems, yet I can't imagine wearing a contact lens continuously for
>the next 10-15+ years.
I would attempt (1) first. If that is not tolerated, then I would
consider a surface refractive procedure such as LASIK or PRK.
Choices (3) and (4) contain considerably more risk and would
definitely be at the bottom.
>There's also the issue of my vision goal for surgery. I was thinking
>of aiming for mild myopia in both eyes (-.5D? -.75D? -1.00D?), hoping
>that I could sometimes function without glasses/bifocal contacts. Does
>this make sense?
Yes.
>I'm also concerned about the accuracy of my pre-cataract surgery
>measurements, especially given my history of vitrectomy. Would I seem
>like a nut case if I requested that they be done twice (or using two
>different methods?)
A high-quality surgeon will do immersion A-scan ultrasonagraphy and
manual keratometry which are both the "gold standard". You could
request the measurements are done by, or verified by repeat
measurement, the surgeon rather than his technician.
[snip]
William Stacy - 22 Jun 2006 17:06 GMT
>
>
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>consider a surface refractive procedure such as LASIK or PRK.
>
I agree with #1 first, but disagree with even considering lasik or prk.
I think at her age, doing a refractive lens exchange makes a lot of
sense, after her peripheral retina has been checked thoroughly by a
retinologist to address any risk of detachment. This of course assumes a
very nice outcome of the first eye.
I also agree with shooting for a mild myopia, around -.5 on the first
eye, and after evaluating the final outcome, decide on the other eye target.
w.stacy, o.d.
>I am a 54-year-old woman with symptoms of a cataract in my right eye,
>resulting from a vitrectomy and epiretinal peel last January (which
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>problems, yet I can't imagine wearing a contact lens continuously for
>the next 10-15+ years.
Keeping the post-op Rx close to the left eye is probably the best soloution.
Regards,
Robert Martellaro
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Optician/Owner
Roberts Optical
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"If a million people believe a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing."
- Anatole France