Let Me Take All of Your Concerns about LASIK Surgery

Many people are hesitant to ask the questions that they need to ask when they are thinking about using a Lasik procedure to correct their vision problems.  While the LASIK procedure is talked about frequently, it usually isn’t discussed in a lot of detail and people have a tendency to be afraid of what they don’t understand.  This report is going to talk about some of the most common fears that people have, and will also talk about the experiences that the vast majority of people experience when they go through a LASIK eye surgery procedure.

One of the biggest and most common fears that people have when considering LASIK is the fear of pain and whether it will hurt are not. This doesn’t only go for LASIK but it also goes for any other type of operation. Since the patient is conscious when the procedure is being performed on them this is a highly understandable fear. In every operation the Lasik surgeon applies numbing drops into the eyes before the procedure starts, and the patient is also given a mild sedative to relax them and make sure that they are comfortable.   About all you will feel throughout the procedure is a small pressure to your eyeball, which is common and doesn’t really hurt at all.

There is a laser used on your eyeball during the procedure which is used to help reshape the cornea. A lot of people have the worry that the laser being shined right in their eyeball might make them look to the side and away from it, and end up with a really serious complication in their eyes from the laser beam effects. The truth of it is though is that the laser beam is only used for a period of about 10 to 15 seconds per eye, and the machine has a system that tracks your eyeball so that the laser beam only works when your eye is in the right position.

Another fear that almost everybody has when they are contemplating going in for a procedure is the fear of the scalpel. Any Lasik procedure uses only a very small microkeratome blade to approach the eye, or some more recent Lasik innovations have the laser itself create the flap and avoid using any hard surface at all.  If you are afraid of being hacked on by a scalpel you don’t have to be afraid of one in the LASIK procedure as one is not used.

Many wonder about the horror stories they hear about this or any other operation, and wonder about serious consequences like going blind.  In order to alleviate these fears the FDA states that there are no reported cases of blindness that are caused by a LASIK surgery procedure. The facts are that the risk of any type of serious and permanent complication arising from a LASIK procedure is less than 1%, and furthermore the risks of any type of permanent complication that isn’t serious, such as halos, is lower than 3%.  Your chances of not having better vision after going through a LASIK procedure is extremely low.

If you are bothered by the thought of him being awake when somebody is working on your eyeball, remember that you are going to be given a sedative and your eyeball will be completely numb.  If the thought of actually seeing the Lasik physician’s hand approaching your eye is bothersome, be comforted that the surgeon applies drops to the eye that blacks out the vision in that eye for ten to fifteen seconds, which is long enough for the procedure to be done for that eye.

I pray that I have touched on most of your fears concerning the LASIK eye surgery procedure with this introduction.  For all of you out there who could benefit from this procedure, and experience the freedom of not having to wear glasses anymore, then visit your local clinic today and speak with them about any of the thoughts you might have concerning LASIK surgery.

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