Imagine not having to experience life from behind lenses. Imagine waking up in the morning, and starting your day without wrestling with contact lenses or hunting for your glasses. Imagine being able to wear prescription free sunglasses without having to fit them over your spectacles. These scenarios are all possible through the modern medical marvel of laser eye surgery.
The world of laser eye surgery is attractive to many patients, providing clarity, convenience, and freedom from glasses or contacts. But like any surgery, not every procedure is right for every patient. There are three main corrective surgeries: LASIK, LASEK, and PRK. All three of these procedures are designed to reshape your cornea wih the use of the Excimer Laser. But all three of them vary quite a bit in terms of method.
What is Excimer Laser surgery?
Excimer laser surgery involves using a laser, which is computer controlled to reshape the cornea. The surgery is designed to treat imperfect vision or in other words, refractive errors.
Until recently only myopia (short sight) and mild astigmatism (uneven shaped cornea, which is more steeply curved in one direction than the other) could be treated. However, thanks to improved laser technology, hyperopia (long sight) and more acute astigmatisms are now routinely treated.
Our online consultants will advise if Excimer Laser surgery is suitable for you. Excimer Laser treatments may not be possible for patients with diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis or lupus (a disease affecting the immune system).
The Procedure
The Excimer Laser is a ‘cool’ type of laser. It doesn’t burn tissue, but vaporises small amounts of the cornea every time a beam of the laser is pulsed onto the surface of the eye. The diameter of the laser beam and the number of pulses that are directed onto the cornea are carefully controlled using computer technology, so that the surface of the cornea is reshaped.
The procedure is performed using local anaesthetic eye drops and takes around 5 minutes per eye. However, the time taken for the reshaping of the cornea with the excimer laser is usually less than a minute.
Different sight problems require different treatments. For example:
- Myopia – the central apex or peak of the cornea must be flattened to reduce the degree of short-sightedness.
- Long-sightedness – the central apex of the cornea needs to be made steeper. This is done by applying the excimer laser to the edge of the cornea.
- Astigmatism – this occurs when the cornea is more curved in one meridian (or axis) than the other so the laser is applied to make the cornea more evenly curved.
After a successful procedure, the cornea is able to focus light rays directly onto the retina at the back of the eye, rather than in front of or behind the retina.