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How Effective Is the Procedure
Reviewed by Denis M. Humphreys, O.D.
What Are My Chances of Better
Vision?
Possibly the most important question you can ask about
vision correction surgery is, "What are my chances
of seeing 20/20?"
The real answer is that there's no absolute guarantee of
seeing 20/20 afterward, but many people do achieve that
result or better.
It's not easy to find statistics about refractive surgery
results, so we've gathered some figures for you -- some
from pre-FDA approval clinical trials -- that may help you
decide one way or another whether you want to go ahead with
the procedure.
LASIK and PRK
LASIK and PRK results have been notably consistent ever
since the FDA approved the first excimer lasers in 1995.
Best results are achieved by low to moderate corrections,
with not as good results for large corrections. Astigmatism
can be treated as well, though the particular type and severity
of astigmatism a person has will affect results.
Here are some numbers:
In recent studies, 98 percent of laser patients achieve
20/40 vision or better after one or more treatments.
Results have shown that 32 percent of eyes undergoing LASIK
for nearsightedness achieved 20/20 or better and 83% achieved
20/40 or better the day after surgery. Six months later,
46 percent of eyes were seeing at least 20/20, with 90 percent
seeing 20/40 or better.
Studies reveal that two thirds of PRK patients reach 20/20
or better vision, while 95 percent reach 20/40 or better.
A study of 1,013 LASIK-treated eyes showed 92 percent were
corrected to 20/40 or better and 47 percent were corrected
to 20/20 or better.
An Argentina study of highly nearsighted eyes (-10.25 to
-15.00 diopters) showed average refractive error of -0.55
diopters and average best corrected visual acuity of about
20/30.
Side Effects
Halos and glare from bright lights at night, pain, starbursts,
blurred vision, night vision problems, infection, dryness
and itchiness are the main complications that patients have
reported after vision correction surgery.
Fortunately, these problems don't occur to most patients,
and when they do, they are usually temporary and treatable.
Even so, you should take side effects seriously and into
account when you decide whether to have refractive surgery.
Several clinical studies report that the chance of having
a vision-reducing complication is less than one percent.
No cases of blindness resulting from laser vision correction
have been reported.
Short-term side effects from LASIK procedures included
pain for one to two days, corneal swelling, double vision
and light sensitivity; some patients experienced the effects
for several weeks. Six months later problems included under-correction
in 11.9 percent, over-correction in 4.2 percent, severe
halo in 3.5 percent and severe glare in 1.7 percent. Glare
and halos were worse in people with larger pupils.
For more information on laser vision correction visit our
Frequently Asked Questions .
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