The excimer laser remains a key part of laser eye surgery, and continues to be optimized over time. The detailed data helps surgeons customize your procedure to deliver the best results for your unique vision care needs.
LASIK patients truly now have more options than ever before. Schedule online or call us direct at What follows is a brief introduction to the History of LASIK, the origins and some of the pioneers of refractive surgery.
Refractive surgery had its beginning in when Father Waclaw Szuniewicz, a Polish missionary and ophthalmologist experimented with changing the shape of the cornea and the impact it had upon eyesight. From to he served as a missionary and as the head of the Department of Ophthalmology at a hospital in Shuntehfu, China and then in continued his research at Yale University.
He felt that such prosthetics reduced quality of life and that a better solution for myopia should be developed. The procedure was originally developed by Svyatoslov Fyodorov in Dr Fyodorov was a Russian ophthalmologist whose discovery came from the treatment of a young boy who had fallen off his bike and shattered his eyeglasses. The accident had lodged glass particles in both his eyes.
Although greeted with much skepticism, the operation was also wildly popular. Fyodorov later developed high-tech assembly-line operating rooms for RK surgery where patients on operating tables rotated from one doctor to another, each responsible for part of the procedures, which were completed in about 15 minutes.
LASIK stands for Laser-Assisted In Situ Keratomileusis and is a procedure that permanently changes the shape of the cornea, the clear covering of the front of the eye, using an excimer laser.
A mechanical microkeratome a blade device or a laser keratome a laser device is used to cut a flap in the cornea. A hinge is left at one end of this flap.
However, on the FDA's website, there also are patient reports of major complications. LASIK surgeons who talked to CBS News said that pre-surgical screening is essential for reducing risks and ensuring that a patient is a good candidate for the procedure. So, we do have people who come back and they've been doing well for years. Ten years later, they come back and their eyes have changed.
They just need a touch up. Tracey Romero PhillyVoice Staff. Women's Health. The contents of this website, such as text, graphics, images, and other material contained on this website, are for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice.
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